John D. Zizioulas Metropolitan of Pergamon
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EUCHARIST, BISHOP, CHURCH: THE U NITY OF THE CHURCH IN THE DIVINE EUCHAR...
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John D. Zizioulas Metropolitan of Pergamon
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EUCHARIST, BISHOP, CHURCH: THE U NITY OF THE CHURCH IN THE DIVINE EUCHARIST AND THE B ISHOP D URING THE FIRST THREE CENTURIES •
translated by Elizabeth Theokritoff • •
• •
HOLY CROSS ORTHODOX PRESS Brookline, Massachusetts
Publicatio~ of this bo~k w s ~~r.eET ~ - ~~~,~
ous donatIon from HIS Emneli&J and South America.
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© Copyright 2001 Holy Cr :' s Orthodox Pre~s Published by Holy Cross Ort 0- ox Press 50 Goddard Avenue Brookline,. Massachusetts 02445
To His Elllinence Archbishop Iakovos
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means electronic, mechanical, photocopy, recording, or any other-without the prior written permission of the publisher. The only exception is brief q~otatio~ in printed reviews. On the cover: St Basil the Great. St Sophia CathedraJ., Ochrid, 11th centurY. Used with the permission of the Embassy of th,e Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, Washington" D.C.
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The publishers wish to thank Rev., Emmanuel Clapsis, Ph.D., of Holy Cross Greek Orthodox School of Theology for his invaluable assistance with aspects of this publication. LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOGIN'G -IN-PuBLICATION DATA
Zizioulas, John, 1931[Enotes bes Ekklesias en te Theia Eucharistia kai to episkopo kata tous treis protous aionas. English1 Eucharist, bishop, church: the unity of the church in the Divine Eucharist and the bishop during tllle first three centuries / John D. Zizioulas ; translated by Elizabeth Theokritoff. p. crnA Includes bibliographical references. ISBN 1-885652-51-8 (paper) 1~ Lordis Supper--History'- -Early church, ca~ 30...600.2. Bishops-History of doctrines--early church, ca. 30-600. 3. Cl1urch-.. Unity-History of doctrines, ca. 30-600. 1. Title. BV823.Z5913 2001 , 262' A1212-dc21
2001024091
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CONTENTS
Preface Preface to the Second Edition Abbreviations
1 5 8
INTRODUCTION: The unity of the Church in the Divine Eucharist and the Bishop as a fundamental historical question
9
PART ONE
PRESUPPOSITIONS: The Relationship Between Church, Eucharist and Bishop in the Consciousness of the Primitive Church
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1. The Divine Eucharist and "The Church of God" 2. The "President" of the Eucharist as "Bishop" of the "Church of Gcid"
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43 45 59
PART Two
FORMATION: Unity in the Divine Eucharist and the Bishop, and the Formation of the "Catholic Church" 1. One Eucharist - One Bishop In Each Church 2. The Divine Eucharist, the Bishop and the Unity of the "Catholic Church." Implications of Unity in the Eucharist and the Bishop for the Formation of the Catholic Church
85 87
107
PART THREE
DEVELOPMENTS: The Development of the One Eucharist "Under the Leadership of the Bishop" 'Into Many Eucharistic Assemblies Led by Priests. The Emergence of the Parish and Its Relationship to the Unity of the Episcopal Diocese
195
1. The Emergence of the Parish 2. The Appearance of the Parish and the Unity of the Church in "One Eucharist, Under the Leadership of the Bishop"
197 218
General Conclusions Selected Bibliography
247 265
P REFACE
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Althou gh this w ork is historical in its method and content, it is not a p rodu ct of historical curiosity. At a time w hen chu rch unity occupies an increasingly central place in theological study, the contribution of our theology is required not simply as an academic d emand, but also a fundam ental d ebt owed to the Church. In order to fulfil the d emand and pay the debt, our theology can n o longer fa ll back on the sources of its own confessional riches. The gradual abandonment of the confessional m entality of p ast generations and the recognition of the need for our theology to be an expression not of one confession but of the one, holy, catholic and apostolic Church herself, now directs the course of theological study towards the sources of the ancient undivided Church . A Church which, in spite of all the disputes and conflicts by which she was often shaken, was always well aware of wha t is m eant by the catholic consciousness of the Church. This holds true, most especially for the study of the unity of the Church which aims to p rovide our divid ed Christian world w ith tha t supra-confessional thread which will help it to rediscover and actualize its unity through·the midst of its variou s divi•
Slons.
For those coming from the Orthod ox tradition, a reliable m ethod of turning towards the sources of the ancient undivid ed Church is through study of the liturgical life of our Church . The reproach leveled a t ou r Church that she has rem ained through the centuries a "community of worship" today, proves to be the best guarantee of a sure route back to the consciousness of the ancient undivided Church. For the liturgical life of our Church w hich is characterized by its conser vatism and traditional character has not su ccumbed to 1
2
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EUCHARIST, BISHOP, CHURCH
overloading with non-essential later elements, but continues to reflect in a changing contemporary world the one, holy, catholic and apostolic Church of every age, worshipping in one body. It is within this general orientation, and encouraged by the flourishing revival in biblical, patristic and liturgical studies in our own day, that this study has been written. Without inappropriately and unthinkingly serving confessional ends, the author has taken as his starting point the fundamental importance of the Eucharist and the Bishop for the unity of the Church as this is recognized especially in the consciousness of the Orthodox Church. For it is unnecessary to stress that out of the entire Christian world, Orthodoxy alone has kept the Eucharist and the Bishop in such a central place in its own consciousness. And if this has been forgotten by certain Orthodox theologians, it has nevertheless always remained in the consciousness of the people of Orthodox piety for whom "the Church" is identified in its concrete sense with the church building in which the Eucharist is celebrated, and in the vaulted domes of which, as a distinguished contemporary Byzantinist has remarked, "the whole (of the architecture and decoration) represents the very Kingdom of God Whose 'realm' the Church is in microcosm, with the communion of saints as the subjects of Christ Pantocrator." The living and mystical depiction of the "communion of saints", i.e. of the body of the Church, in eucharistic worship, in which the bishop's throne rules as "the place of God" according to St Ignatius, reveals the "Eucharist under the leadership of the bishop" as a living symbol and practical expression of the unity of the Church. Starting from these observations, this study aims to place in the light of the consciousness of the early Church the whole relationship connecting the unity of the Church with the Eucharist and the Bishop. Did this relationship exist in the early Church, and to what extent? Was such a relationship of decisive importance for the formation of the early catholic Church, and what specific implications did it have for that Church's consciousness concerning unity? Such were the basic questions that the present study set itself to address. It
Preface
3
is obvious that these questions concern only one aspect of the very broad subject of the Church's unity. This must be underlined here, in order not to lay the study open to being misunderstood as "one-sided" in the position it takes towards the unity of the Church. There, certainly, remain many aspects of this very broad subject which are not covered by this study, and which await investigation. But awareness of this fact does not negate the author's conviction that at least for him, living as he does within the Orthodox milieu, it was impossible to do other than give absolute priority to this aspect of the subject. Apart from these purely practical limitations, this study is also limited by its methodology and the chronological limits to its sources. It is natural that anything relating to the unity of the Church should touch on problems in many branches of theology and raise questions belonging to various different theological concerns. Without underrating the importance of these questions, the author has consistently distanced himself from the contemporary debate and, in conducting his research, has bypassed the theories of modern theologians concerning the unity of the Church. He has taken a purely historical vantage point and turned to the sources not only for his answers, but also for his questions. It has, therefore, been judged essential in the lengthy introduction to this book to clear the ground of our research from modern schemes within which the subject of the Church's unity has been imprisoned and which historiography, in an inadmissible betrayal of any notion of historical method, has habitually transferred to the study of the ancient Church. Confining itself to a strict examination of the sources, this study has drawn on contemporary literature only selectively and as a subsidiary source. The literature relating to the Church of the first three centuries is a veritable labyrinth out of which the scholar can find his way only by being strictly selective if he wants to avoid becoming embroiled in discussion with his contemporaries to the detriment of a correct understanding of the historical sources. But this selection requires a knowledge of the literature and demands painstaking effort. The extent of the bibliography at the end of
4
Preface to the II Edition
E UCHARIST, B ISHOP, CHURCH
this book and the number of footnotes show how little we have succeeded in our aim of restricting the literature u sed. As to the chronologicallirnits on the sources for this w ork, these have dictated them selves in the course of research. The great figure of St Cyprian and the whole p eriod to w hich he belongs form a landmark in the history of ecclesiology, while the full development during this time of the axiom ecclesiam in episcopo et episcopum in ecclesia esse naturally presents the scholar studying the subject of this work with the first milestone of an entire p eriod. The three parts of our study are devoted resp ectively to the presuppositions, the formation and the developments in our subject during this p eriod . The continuation of this endeavor into the sources from the fourth century onwards a task which, fortunately, is infinitely easier owing to the abundance of extant sources, has yet to be accomplished. This study owes its completion and publication to the blessing of God , which is manifested throu gh m any people. The writing of it was mad e possible thanks to the abundant research material available a t Harvard University which gave hospitality to the author for many successive years. The presen ce at tha t univer sity of distinguished professors, in p articular G. Florovsky, G. Williams and K. Stendahl, was a fo nt of inspiration and encouragement during the entire course of the research . Again, the submission of this stud y as a d octoral dissertation at my own alma mater, the Theological School of the University of A thens, p rovided the opportunity for some valuable suggestions and comments from the faculty there. The author is, therefore, d eeply grateful, both for the trouble they took w ith him as teachers, and for all they did particularly for the present work, according it the honor of unanimo us approval. Wallnest thanks are due especially to m y ad viser Professor Gerasimos Konidaris both for his kind introduction to the School and for all his invaluable help. Finally, the original publication of this work w ould not have been possible but for the generous and touching finan cia l s uppo r t o f M e tropo litan Pa nte le imo n of Thessaloniki and of Metropolitan Dionysios of Servies and Kozani w ho ungrudgingly took great tro uble reading the
5
drafts and followed the progress of the study, giving invaluable help from his rich literary and theological resources. To all of these and many others who indirectly and in various w ays contributed to the appearance of this w ork, the expression of m y gratitude rep ays only a sm all part of an unpaid d ebt. J. D . Z . PREFACE
•
To THE SECOND EDITION (I990)
The reception accorded to the present w ork was su ch that it long ago w ent out of print. The repeated calls fro m various quarters for the book to be republished accorded with the author 's own d esire to add some chapters to the stud y which he considered indisp ensable fo r its completion, and to furnish the whole w ork with a new bibliography. Unfortunately, because of the time such an undertaking w ould require, it w as proving ever m ore impracticable, and became virtually impossible after the author took on ecclesiastical obligations and duties in addition to his acad emic responsibilities about three years ago. There w as thus nothing to be d one but to reprint the w ork as it was, m erely with the correction of some printing errors and omissions in the original edition . Tw o observations con tributed decisively to the decisio n to reprint this w ork. The first is academic in nature, and consists in the fact that even though 25 years have passed since this study w as first published and m any other studies relating to its subject have appeared in the m ean time, the basic theses of this work are still sound and need no revision. It could indeed be said that the whole course of research internationally since this study was w ritten has confirmed its theses w ith the result that they have becom e quite widely and in ternationa lly known and are now often regarded as commonp lace. This was an encouraging factor in the d ecision to reprint this book even in its o riginal form. The second observation w hich contributed d ecisively to the reprinting of this w o rk is ecclesiastical in nature. The Orthodox Church, particularly in Greece, is today going through
E UCHARIST, BISHOP, CHURCH
Preface to the IT Editio!1
a critical period which, if the necessary care is not taken by the Church leadership, will soon lead to a crisis in institutions with unforeseen consequences for the doctrinal purity and substance of the Orthodox Church in that country. The characteristics of this critical period could be summarized in the following pOints. Firstly, under the influence of the modern spirit of socalled" democratic" tendencies, the institution of episcopacy, which had in the past been identified with "despotism" is, today, experiencing a severe crisis. Many priests, a large part of the lay faithful and many bishops, too, do not know what exactly the task and the institution of the bishop consists in, and how it is connected with the doctri!1al substance of the Church. Unfortunately, many Orthodox have it firmly entrenched in their mind that the the bishop is in essence an administrator, and that in his liturgical function, including indeed the Divine Eucharist, he is not a person constitutive of the Mystery but more or less decorative someone who is invited to "embellish" the whole service by his presence and his vestments. Precisely because of the w eakening of the ancient conception which this work demonstrates in such detail, namely, that the bishop is in essence the only president of the Divine Eucharist and that no Divine Liturgy is thinkable without reference to the bishop in whose name it is celebrated, ordination as priest has come to be regarded by many as sufficient for someone to celebrate the Divine Eucharist and transmit grace to the people without any clear d ependence on his bishop. This idea can be seen at its ultimate extreme in cases where the Divine Liturgy is celebrated witho ut the commemora tion of a bishop! When this "presbyterianism" is permitted (a "presbyterianism" which, thanks to the influence of Orthodox theology, is starting to be questioned even by Protestants today), it threatens the doctrinal foundations of the Church as they were laid down during the first centuries. In her attempt to avoid the Scylla of "desp otism", the Church is in danger of falling into the Charybdis of a sort of "presbyterianism" if the proper place of the bishop in the Church is not brought to people's awareness.
Secondly, under the influence of a revival of the "charismatic" element in contemporary Orthodoxy - or rather of the emphasis placed on it because that element had never disappeared from the life of the Church - the institutional aspect of ecclesiology tends to be relegated to second place. Orthodoxy tends to be turned into an ideology. It is forgotten that Orthodoxy is Church, and tha t the Church is a community with a specific structure, and that this structure is episcopocentric. Everything that is performed in the Church, including those manifestations considered most "spiritual" and "charismatic" (not that there is anything in the Church that is non-charismatic or non-spiritual) such as spiritual fatherhood, confession etc., all stem from the bishop and have need of his approval and permission. Never in the pas t, throughout the long history of the Orthodox Church, was it possible to exercise spiritual fatherhood without express episcopal permission in writing. Only in our day do we have a superabundance of "charismatics" who are active and carry on their spiritual work Simply by right of their priesthood or their "gifts", without it being clear tha t everything in the Church is done in the name of the bishop. In this way the Orthodox laity begins to get accu stomed to situations which threaten to blow up the foundations of Orthodoxy as it has been passed down to us, and we knew it only a generation ago. The present work, grounded as it is in the sources of the first centuries, is made available in its reprinted form in fulfilment of the au thor's d ebt to the holy Orthodox Church as a bishop and as a theologian. The scholarly grounding of its conclusions seeks to persuade any sincere reader, Orthodox or not, that Orthodoxy, not as ideology but as Church, as founded on the teaching and the blood of a St Ignatius of Antioch, an Irenaeus or a Cyprian, is the One, Holy, Catholic and Apostolic Church because it possesses the truth not only in its teaching but also in its structure. It is the duty of Orthodoxy to bear witness to this everywhere in the critical period through which we are now passing. +John of Pergamon
6
7
ABBREVIATIONS
Vivliotheke EllenOl! Pateran kai Ekklesiastikon Syngrapheon. Ed. Apostoliki Diakonia, Greece, 1955 et seq. Dictionnaire d' Archeologie chretienne et de D.A.e.L. Liturgie, 1907 et seq. Dictionnaire de Droit canonique, 1924 et seq. D.D.e. Dictionnaire de Thi!ologie catholique, 1923 et seq. D.Te. Epistemonike Epeteris tes Theologikes Scholestou E.E.Th.5. Panepistemiou Athenon E.E.Th.5.Th. Epistemonike Epeteris tes Theologikes Scholes tou Panepistemiou Thessalonikes Konidaris, General Church History from Jesus G.C.H.G. Christ to our own times (in Greek), I, 19572, Lexikon fUr Theologie und Kirche, 1957 et seq. L.T.K. Migne, Patrologia, series graeca PG. Migne, Patrologia, series latina PL.
VE.PA.D.
KG.G.
Religion in Geschichte und Gegenwart, 1909 1, 19272,1959' et seq.
TW.N.T. Z.N.T.W. Z.K.T
Theologisches Worterbuch zum Neuen Testament, G. Kittel- G. Friedrich, 1933 et seq. Zeitschrif/ fiir neutestamentliche Wissenschaft und die Kunde der iilteren Kirche, 1900 et seq. Zeitschrif/ fiir katholische Theologie, 1873 et seq.
I NTRODUCTION
The Unity of the Church in the Divine Eucharist and the Bishop as a Fundamental Historical Question: Methodological Principles and Scope of the Subject Throughout the entire period of the first three centuries, unity was bound up at the deepest level with the faith, the prayers and the activities of the Church. 5t John's Gospel reflects this fact when it presents the unity of the Church as an agonized petition in the prayer of the Lord .' The Acts of the Apostles expresses the same reality when they emphatically stress unity as the element characteristic of the Church's life in her first years' while the existence of a "theology of unity" at a period as early as that of 5t Paul's Epistles' cannot be interpreted otherwise than as an indication of the importance which the Church from the beginning attached to her unity. During the years following apostolic times, the Church regarded her unity as a matter of constant concern and an object of vehement faith. The texts of the so-called Apostolic Fathers present the unity of the Church as an object of teaching, and something for which they struggled against every divisive force'Around the end of the second century, Irenaeus attempts in a work especially devoted to the subject to show that the Church was and has been preserved as one,' and that unity constitutes the necessary condition for her existence.' A few generations la ter, 5t Cyprian devotes a special study to the subject of church unity7 while in the various credal documents, unity early assumes the character of an article of faithS Once one sees the tremendous importance of unity for the Church of the first three centuries, the question arises for history - was this unity a historical reality, or was there sim9
10
Introduction
EUCHARIST, B ISHOP, CHURCH
ply an unfulfilled d esire and a nostalgic quest for a unity w hich p roved in reality a p erpetually and IncreasIngly unattainable ideal? As we shall see below, almost all m odern historiography has contributed through its various theses to a picture of the Church of the first three centunes as a SOCIety from the first deeply divided in su ch a way as to create the impression that schism was an innate part of the Church orgamsm . . There are thus two aspects to the overall theme of the unity of the Church. One concerns the ideal or the teaching of the early Church concerning her unity. The other concerns what the Church experienced as unity during the period under examination . The firs t them e m ay b e ch aracterized as the theology of unity as it was conceived and formulated b y the early Church. The second constitutes the hIstory of umty as It can be reconstructed from study of the sources with the aid of o.bjective historical research. It is precisely within the context of this his torical problem of the existence and form of unity in the Church that the subject of the present w ork finds its place. If, during the highly critical first three centuries examined here, the Church exp erien ced h er unity as a his torical rea lity, w h a t w as the significance of the Eucharist and the Bishop who led it for the expression of this reality? Church histon ography In recent years has attached no importance to this question. If we follow its d evelopment, we shall be amazed at the lack of any kind of historical study of this subject even in recent years when church unity has occupied a central place In theologIcal concerns. Why, when so much has been written about unity, has virtually nothing been written specifically about unity in the Eu charist and in the Bishop ? ThIS perpleXIng omission has a substantial influence on the Importance of our them e. For this reason it is necessary by way of introduction to look at the reasons for this position taken by mod ern historiography on the subject under examination before going on to d efine the presuppositions underlying our own research.
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If we attempt to penetrate quite deeply into the bod y of Western Theology in recent years, we shall discover that its w riting of church history is still working within schemes and presuppositions the foundations of w hich were laid d own in the last cen tur y without really having been revised since in the light of more recent d ata. These schem es and presupp ositions within which unity in the Eu charist and in the Bishop can find no p lace might be summarized as follows on the basis of a critical review of the principal p ositions adopted by m od ern historiography. a) Under the influen ce of the Tiibingen School w hich looked at primitive Christianity throu gh the len s of id ealism, as a projection of certain ideas and values in history, the unity of the Church was placed on foundations such that it was natural for the Eucharist and the Bishop to be w holly absent. In the w hole conception of the subject of church unity, it is ideas that dominate. Through being placed in the fram ew ork of the Hegelian schem e of the p hilosophy of history, the w hole question of church unity was presented as a synthesis of ideological currents w hich had long been fighting each other. Well-known is the theory of F. C. Bauer and the Tiibingen School. According to w hich, on the basis of St Paul's Epistle to the Galatians, early Christianity exhibited the form thesis-antithesis-synthesis. The first two elem,ents being being represented resp ectively by the "Jewish Christianity" of the Church of Jerusalem and the "Hellen izing Christianity" of Paul, and the synthesis being achieved only in the person of Irenaeus 9 This approach to the subject of unity in early Christianity has been m aintained by church historians of the generations following Bauer even to this d ay. It is noteworthy that distinguished modern historians continue to talk about deep and unbridgeable d ivisions between a movement led by Paul on the one hand, and another led by the Twelve and in particular Peter and James in Jerusalem ,lO w hile the con clu s ion is e mph a ti cally draw n tha t " there were Christianities before there was one Christianity" - unity hav-
EUCHARIST, BISHOP, CHURCH
Introduction
ing appeared as the result of a dialectical d evelopment only around the end of the second centuryll Even the strong reaction in our own day against the Tiibingen theories about Paul's "Hellenism" and the "Judaism" of Peter and the others was working within just the same framework of the scheme marked out by Tiibingen with its antithesis between "Judaizing" and "Hellenizing" Christianity.12 It is Christianity were not in a position to draw the forces decisive for its formation from itself as a third agent independent of Judaism and Hellenism alike." This idealist view of the essence of Christianity misled church historiography into the antithetical scheme of Judaism versus Hellenism som ething which was alien to the mentality of the primitive Church," while at the sam e time providing a point of departure for the extreme theories of the supposed original prevalence of heresy in the Church 15 and the division of early Christianity into groups which co• existed for a long time despite their fundamental differences in faith." Of course, confronting such theories is not part of the purpose of this study, but they have corne in for seriou s criticism even among Protestant historians. 17 What is of great importance for us is that behind these theories lies the notion that the unity of the Church consists essentially in a synthesis of ideas. It is precisely this assumption that explains why modern church history in its study of the unity of the Church attaches almost no significance to the person of the Lord and union with Him through the Eucharist. b) In parallel with the idealism of Tiibingen, the subject of the Church's unity also came to be strongly influenced by the school of A. Harnack, who introduced a different antithetical scheme d estined, as it proved in retrospect, to have a profound effect on church historiography and one which has yet to be redressed. This sch eme consists in the antithesis between "localism" and "universalism" which is another form of the antithesis between individual and totality. Thus the unity of the Church was conceived of and p osed as a question within the context of these antithetical schem es. And fo r Harnack and the pricipal Protestant historia ns after him,!'
placing the question in this context led to the view that the whole evolution of the Church's unity passed first through individualism 19 and then through localism so as to end up as a world-wide organization. 20 For Roman Catholic historiography w hich was represented by early the great historian P. Batiffol, an author of a notable work'i countering the views on unity of Sohm and Harnack, unity consisted in submission of the individual to the authority of the clergy on the one hand, and on the other, in the world-wide character of the Church with Rome at its center." Thus Protestant and Roman Catholic historiography alike viewed the unity of the Church through the lens of these antitheses, and have not been able to free themselves from them completely even today." This has had the result that for Protestant and Roman Catholic historians alike, the unity and catholicity of the Church is essentially identified with the universality of the Church and h er Romanization" with the further consequence' that the Protestants place the "catholicizing" of the Church as late as possible, as if catholicity were something bad for the essential nature of Christianity.25 This view of the unity and catholicity of the Church was to the detriment of an understanding of the spirit and mind of the early Church. Oppositions between individual and totality or between localism and universality were never predominant in the mentality of the early Church," but were products of modern ideals of human rights and cosmopolitanism. Harnack's transference of these schemes to the study of the early Church, and the fa ithful continuation of the dialogue between Protestants and Roman Catholics on church unity within this sam e context, have imposed on research the blinders which have not allowed proper priority to be given to the unity of the Church in the Divine Eucharist and the bishop who leads it. c) All this happened at a time when, and perhaps because, the Divine Eucharist and the bishop had long since ceased to be connected either with each other, or with the essence of the Church and her unity, in the consciousness of Western theology. To believe that the bishop is an instrument of the
12
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E UCHARIST, BISHOP, CHURCH
Introduction
Church indispensable for her administration, is a different matter from connecting him w ith the nature of the Church and ascribing ecclesiological content to the institution ofbishops. Again, it is one thing to say tha t the Eucharist is indispensable as one of the "seven sacraments" of the Church, and quite another to regard it as the supreme revelation of the Church herself. O nly if we regard the Eucharist as the revelation of the Church in her ideal and historical unity, and the bishop first and foremost as the leader and head of the eucharistic assembly which unites the Church of God in space and time, do we recognize in each of these their profound ecc1esiological content. But Western theology, since scholasticism, had ceased to see things in this way. Relegated to the order of the "seven sacraments" the Eu charist became one means among many to human salvation," being considered in an individualistic sense," rather than the very expression of salvation which 29 essentially consists in the union of man with God in Christ. And the bishop, divorced from his principal task of leading the Euch arist and becoming a mainly administrative figure, was necessarily divorced also from the ecc1esiological content of the Eucharist. The state of Western theology in modern times, as set out with all p ossible brevity in the foregoing three p oints, explains, we believe, the curious fact that all modern theological study on the unity of the Church has to such an extent overlooked what ought to be the starting-point for such study: the unity of the Church in the Divine Eucharist and in the bishop.
"Judaism-Hellenism" and the relation between individual and totality, there is already evident particularly in Orthod ox theology, the tendency to avoid the extremesJO which turn these relationships into antitheses." While as to the relationship between universality and localism, although the question has yet to be dealt with in its fundamentals" there can be seen a tendency for Orthod ox theology, too to become embroiled in the dilemma placed before us when this relati o ns hip is presente d as a n antithesis " A s to the ecclesiological principles which have been given particular prominence of late and make it difficult if not impossible to view the unity of the Church through the lens of the foregoing schemes and assumptions, we shall confine ourselves to the following basic remarks. An ecclesiological view, which is increasingly prevalent, today, holds that the first appearance and the essence of the Church - and consequently also of her unity, since Church without unity is, in principle and theoretically at least, inconceivable - should be placed notat the time when people first consciously turned to Christ and their first community was fDI med , i.e. on the d ay of Pentecost, as was once believed, but before that." For, as is also strongly stressed today, the essence of Christianity and the Church should be sought in the very person of the Lord" on which the Church was founded .36 But if this principle is accepted, then the revelation in Christ ceases to be a system of ideas as the Tiibingen School conceived it, and becomes a truth ontological in character" Accordingly, what is paramount in ecclesiology is not this or that doctrine, idea or value revealed by the Lord, but the very person of Christ and man's union with Him. In this way, the Church is described as Christ Himself, the whole Christ in Augustine's apt phrase," while ecclesiology ceases to be a separa te chapter for theology and becomes an organic chapter of Christology.39 Once ontology thus takes precedence over ideology or syste ms of values in an ecclesiology which is understood Christologically, this makes it impossible to study the unity of the Church within the framework of the antitheses intro-
14
c:so The recognition of unity in the Eucharist and the bishop as the starting-point for any historical research on the unity of the Church follows automatically once historical research frees itself from the antithetical schemes outlined above, and looks a t the unity of the Church in the light of certain basic ecclesiological assumptions whose importance is now increa sin gl y be ing re co gnized. As to the sch e m e
15
16
E UCHARIST, BISHOP, CHURCH
duced by F.C Bauer, R. Sohm, A. Harnack etc. If the unity of the Church is seen, first and foremost, as a unity in the person of Christ, as incorpora tion into Him and His increase or building-up, the starting-point for studying the unity of the Church does not belong in the above antithetical schemes. This Christo logical view of the mystery of the Church makes it equally impossible to study the unity of the Church within a pneumatocentric ecclesiology,40 in which there is a risk of ecclesiology being made into "charismatic sociology"'l and the unity of the Church becoming nothing more than a societas fidei et Spiritus Sancti in cordibus." This observation is not to deny that in ecclesiology a fundamental position is occupied by the Holy Spirit, and indeed by the Holy Trinity as a whole, Who undoubtedly constitutes the supreme principle of the Church." The question here is a different one, and concerns our starting-point in looking at the Church and he~ unity: is it correct to start from the phenomenon of the Church as "community", or from the notion of the person of Christ as the Incarnate Word who also contains within Himself the "many"? This question is of vital importance in studying the unity of the Church. For in the first case, which is where a pneumatocentric ecclesiology leads, the Church is considered as "the body of Christians" united in the Holy Spirit. While in the second case it is seen as the "body of Christ" in an ontological sense. But if the Christological view of the Church is accepted, this automatically entails a consequence of the highest importance for the study of the unity of the Church: the necessity of considering this unity, first and foremost, sacramentally, i.e. as the incorporation of human beings in Christ. For historical research, this means an obligation to start with the question: how was this incorporation of human beings in to the person of Christ manifested in space and time especially after His ascension into heaven? But precisely this question, stemming from the Christological and as such sacramental vi~w of the Church, is in itself indicative of the need for any historical research into the unity of the Church to begin with the Divine Eucharist.
Introduction
17
czSO
The view of the Divine Eucharist as the supreme sensible incorporation of the Church in space and time into Christ does indeed form an essential presupposition for any research on the unity of the Church. For, as h as been aptly remarked, "it is only in the mystery of the Divine Eucharist that we have some perceptible portrayal of the mystical union and incorporation of Christ with the faithful who partake of Him, the members of His body."" Indeed, the close relationship between Eucharist and Church unity, already very widely acknowledged especially among Orthodox theologians," has led some to m ake a complete and exclusive identification between the notions of Church and Eucharist. We see this in the so-called eucharistic ecclesiology" whose main representatives in modern times were N. Afanassieff and A. Schmemann." Having reservations about placing this theory under the light of the general conclusions of this study, we shall confine ourselves here to stress.i ng that its emphasis on the ecclesiological character of the Eucharist and also the eucharistic character of the Church" is an important positive element which cannot be a matter of indifference to the historian of Church unity. But in recognizing this positive element in a eucharistic ecclesiology, we have to beware of the lurking danger of onesidedness" which can prove damaging to historical research. Undoubtedly, the unity of the Church is expressed in space and time par excellence by the sensible incorporation of the faithful in Christ as this is brought about in a truly unique m anner in the Eucharist. But the notion of the Church and her unity, is not expressed to the full in a eucharistic unity which lacks any preconditions. The Church has always felt herself to be united in faith ,so love,'l baptism," holiness of life, etc. And, it is certainly true that all this was incorporated very early into the Eucharist" A fact which not only indicates the priority that the Church recognized in the Eucharist as a factor in unity, but also d emons trates that the Eucharist cannot be studied as a closed object, apart from the content of Church
18
EUCHARIST, BISHOP, CH UR CH
Introduction
life as a wh ole an d its inI lue nc e on the wh ole of ma n's life in the Ch urc h an d in the wo rld . 54 If, ho we ve r, we de cid e for me tho do log ica l rea so ns to iso lat e the Eu ch ari st as the pri ma ry fac tor in un ity an d tra ce it throu gh his tor y, as we pro po se to do he re, we ne ed to be co ns tan tly aw are tha t in so do ing we res tri ct ou rse lve s to jus t one part of the lar ge subject of the un ity of the Ch urc h.55 In this way, we sh all av oid the da ng er of on esi de dn ess inh ere nt in the rec og nit ion , correc t in pr inc ipl e, of the ec cle sio log ica l ch ara cte r of the Eu ch ari st.
solidation and con tinuation of the canonical unity of the Church outside the Eu charist was and has remained inconceivab le. Th us the bis ho p, un de rst oo d no t jus t as the vis ibl e he ad of the eu ch ari sti c ass em bly bu t als o as the sole tra nsm itte r of pri est ho od in the Ch urc h an d in thi s wa y the ex pre ssi on an d gu ard of can on ica l un ity , rem ain s for the his tor ian ind iss olu bly bo un d up wi th the Eu ch ari st wh en thi s is un de rst oo d pri ncip all y as an ass em bly "in the sam e pla ce" (epi to auto),6O ex pre ssi ng in sp ac e an d tim e the un ity of the Ch urc h of Go d.
'. 52, 67, 63, 168 f., 110 f. M. Dibelius-WG. Kiimme!, Pauills, 1951, pp. 25,82, 114,131, 120. WL. Knox, St Paul, 1932, pp. 64, 94, 120. M. Gogue!, Les premiers temps de I'Eglise, 1949, p . 53,68, 106 etc. The division of ancient Christianity into "judaizing" and "hellenizing" can also be observed in the work of the late Professor V. Stephanidis, Church History (in Greek), 1948, pp. 20f., 27f., 21 and esp. 41, w here we even have the impression that there w as no communion between Jew ish and Gentile Christians. II See M. Goguel, op. cit. p . 19: "The m ovement in the formati on of Christianity was from diversity to unity. There were Christianities before there was one Christianity. It was only around the end of the second century with the early catholicism of Irenaeus and Tertullian that the movement towards unifica tion reached a conclusion which was subsequently confirmed and fixed." For this writer, the unity of the primitive Church w as m ore a "yearning for unity than the sense of its complete realiza tion." See his study "Unite e t diversite du Christianism e primitif," in Revue d'Histoire et de Philosophie religiellses 19 (1939), 5. The idea of a p rogression from division and diversity to u n ity is one tha t we constantly find as a cornerstone of Protestant church historiography. Thus inter alios M. H ornschu h, "Die Apostel als Trager der Dberlieferung," in E. H ennecke, Nelltestamentliche Apokryphen, ed . W Schneemelcher, li, 1964, p. 41 f.
Notes to In troduction
27
See inter alia the works of G. Dix, Jew and Greek, 1953 and J. Da n ielo u, Theologie du Judeochristianisme, 1958 and Message Evangeliqlle et Clliture HeUtinistique allx II' et lII' Siecies, 1961, w hich work within the same antithe tical scheme. 13 The subject is of great importance and exceptionally difficul t, and has yet to be dealt w ith in our own history of dogma. Ct. J. Karmiris' review of a s tudy by E. Benz in TIle% gia 30 (1559), 520 f. , es p . 5221. Fo r the present, it is s uffi cient he re to recall the two-p ronged thrust of church literature du ring the fi rst three centuries taking a position opposed equally to Gentile-Hellenizing and to Judaizing. 1. On this see the excellent study by B. Sund kler, "Jesu s et les Paiens," in Revue d' Histoire et de Philosophie Religiellses 6 (1936), 473f. 15 As for example by W Bauer, Rechtgliillbigkeit lllld Ketzerei im iiltesten Christentum , 1964' and W Nigg, Das Buch der Ketzer, 1949. Ct. W G. Kiimme!, Das Neue Testament. Geschichte der Erforschung seiner Probleme, 1958, pp. 145-243. 16 O n the "group" theory, besides the above see also H . Schoeps, Urgemeillde, Judenchristentllm, Gnosis, 1956, pp. 3-8. Ct. also below. 17 For a serious critique 'of these theories, particularly those of W Bauer, see H .E.W Turner, The Pattern of Ch ristian Tru th. A Study 12
in Relations Between Orthodoxy and Heresy in the Early Chu rch, 1954; A. Ehrhard t, "Christianity Before the Apostles' Creed ," in The Harvard Theological Review 55, (1962) 73-119 and E. Kasemann,
•
"Ketzer und Zeuge. Z um johannischen Verfasserproblem ," in Zeitschrift ftjr Tlteologie und Kirche, 48 (1951), 292-311. 18 For the present, see the theories on ea rly catholicism of H . Lietzmann, op. cit. I, p . 234; J.v. Bartlet, Church Life and Church Order (ed . Cad ou x), 1942, pp. 4, 40, 167-171; K. Heussi, Kompendium der Kirchengeschichte, 194910, p. 25 and M. Goguel, La Naissance du Christianisme, 1946, p . 282. For an excellent analysis of the position of earlier modern research on this subject, see O. Linton, Das Problem der Urkirche in der nelleren Forschllng, 1932, passim. See also H . Kung, "Der Friihkatholizismus im N.T. als Kontroversstheologisches problem", in Tiibinger Thealog. Quartalschrift (1962) 385-424. J9 The foundations for individualism in ecclesiology had already been laid by R. Sohm, for w hom, consistent as he was wi th the whole pietistic theology of Lu theran ism (Schleiermacher etc.), the Church is in essence nothing but an invisibl e rea lity; a number of the predestined and the believers (predestinatorum et credentillm) whose groups form parallel lines meeting only at infinity. The grav-
28
29
EUCHARIST, BISHOP, CHURCH
Notes to Introduction
est misfortune in the w hole d evelopment of the C hurch therefore took place, according to Sohm, when "through 1 ClemenY' the spirit of organization and law entered into Christianity, elements w hich he rega rded as incompatible with the essence of religion (see his views on the subject set outin his work Kirchenrecht, J, 1892, passim and esp. p. 161). A. Harnack was certainly opposed to Sohm's extreme position on the incompatibility of religion and law (see
exis tence they had the surest guarantee. We now find a new com-
monwealth, politically formed and equipped with fixed forms of all kinds ... We find the Church as a political union (politischen Band) and worship institute (Kuitllsanstait), a formulated faith and a sacred lea rning (Gottesgelehrsamke); but one thing we no longer find, the old enthusiasm and individualism which had not felt itself fettered by subjection to the authority of the Old Testament. Instead of enthus iastic independent Christians, we find a new Hterature of revelation, the New Testament, and Chris tian priests." 21 See P. Batiffol, L'Eglise Naissallte et Ie Cat/wlicisme, 1909'. 21 The idea that the unity and catholicity of the Church consist precisely in her being a worldwide body with Rome at her center, in such a way that Rome alone remains the Church of the Lord par excellence, is maintained by certain Roman Catho lic historians even at the time of this writing. See e.g. G. Bardy, "Die Religion Jesu" in
Entstehllng lind Entwicklung der Kirchenverfassllng lind der Kirchenrec" ts in den zwei ersten Jahrhllnderten, 1910, p. 149), but without disagreeing with the individualistic view of Christianity, the essence of which, as set out in Harnack's own work Das Wesen des Christentums (see second edition, 1950, passim), is noth ing more than the inner mo ral renewal of each human being. Protestant theology after Harnack continued along th e sa me lines of an individualistic view of the ·essence of Christianity. The " life in Christ" was regarded as an inner, psychological state of each individual (see e.g. A. Deissmann, Die neutestnmentliche Formel "in Christo lesu" untersucht, 1892 and eiusdem Licht vom Osten ... , 1923, p. 257. Despite the prominence given to the communal character of primitive C hristianity by the so-called escha tological school, which is first found in J. Weiss' work Die Predigt Jesus vom Reich Gottes, 1892 a nd esp ecially in its second edition (1900), and was reinforced by the influence of supporters of the so-called "New Consensus" (cf. K. Mouratidis, The Essence and Polity of the Church in the Teaching of John Chrysostom, 1958, p. 145, n. 2), the individualistic interpretation of ecclesiology was never abandoned altogether. We see this from e.g. R. Bultmann's theories on the Church in Glauben und Verstehen II, 1958, pp. 13 and 18, and even more strongly from the work of E. Brunner, Das Missverstiindniss der Kirche, 1951, esp. Ch. 8 § 6 etc., where we come back to the extreme position of R. Sohm on the relation between religion and law. 20 Because of the influence this view o f H arnack's has had on modern historiography, we give the comple te passage from his Dogmengeschichte, I, 1894' (ET Buchanan, History of Dogma, 1905, p. 45): "If again we compare the Church about the middle of the third century with the condition of Christendom 150 or 200 years before, we shall find that there is now a real relig ious commonwealth (ein religidses Gemeinwesen), w hile at the earlier period there were only communities (Gemeinden) who believed in a heavenly Church, whose earthly image they were, endeavored to g ive it expression with the Simplest means, and lived in the future as s trangers and pilgrims on the ea rth, hastening to meet the Kingdom of whose
Christus llnd die Religionen der Erde. Halldbuch der Religionsgeschichte, ed. DDr F. Koning, III, 1951, pp. 547-642, esp. p. 632. Cf. also the
•
scathing critique of this by Professor L. Philippidis, "Incredible!" (in Greek), in Orthodoxos Skepsis 1 (1958),51-54. 23 See e.g J. Colson, L'Eveqlle dalls les CommunauUs Primitives, 1951. This study concludes that the ministry of the b ishop took shape under the influence of two traditions: on the one hand, the Pauline tradition which, according to the w riter, emphaSized the universal unity of the Church and the charismatics, and on the o ther, the Johannine which, according to the same w riter, emphasized th e local Church and the permanent minis ters, the two traditions being brought together into one by Irenaeus. It is evident that this author, although a Roman Catholic, is a prisoner of the mod els introduced by Harnack with their a ntithesis between loca lism and universalism, and has not altogether escaped the influence of the Hegelian model of the Tiigingen School as discussed above. 24 This coincidence in the views of Protestant and Roman Catholic his to rians as to the essence of catholicism is revealed, we think, by the following admission by Harnack in his review of Batiffol, op. cit.: 'That Roman = Catholic is something that I as a Protestant historian first put forward 22 years ago in m y History of Dog1lla, with certain reservations which the author ad mittedly seeks for the most part to remove." (Theologische Literatllrzeitllllg 34 (1909), 52). 25 See above, note 18. Certainly things are different today, w ith the increasing recognition of the significance of Church unity within
)
30
the Ecumenical Movement. There is already a tendency evide nt in Protes tantism for its churches to claim catholicity for themselves, giving the term a peculiar sense w hich has yet to be fully clarified. Study of the subject of the Church's catholicity is thus extremely important and useful today. 26 See once again B. Sundkler, op. cit. 27 Cf. A. Schmemarm, "Theology and Eucharis t" (in Greek), in Theology, Trl/th and Life (ed. Zoe Brotherhood, in Greek), 1962. It is characteristic of that kind of Roman Catholic theological position that in the valuable entries on the Divine Eucharist in the D.T.e., one looks in vain for a paragraph on the ecclesiological character of the Eucharist. The same goes for the rich recent work by J. Betz, Eucharistie in der Zeit der griechischen Viiter, 1/1, 1955 who does not intend to examine the relationship between Eucharist and Church unity even in the ensuing second volume of his work judging by the preface to the first volume (p. viii). It is, however, worthy of special note that this work of Betz's revives the emphasis on the active presence (Actualprasentz) of the work and also the person of the L"rd, in place of the scholastic emphasis on the Real Presence in the elements of the Eucharist. This is perhaps a d efinite step towards an ontological view of the mystery w hich also leads naturally to an ecclesiological view. The only strong voice of protest in modern Roman Catholic theology against the scholastic doctrine of the Eucharistr which has, therefore, been considered revolutionary for Western theology, is the. teaching of Odo Casel, w ho was the first to oppose the view of the Eucharist as an "object" and a mere means of salva tion unde rlining its character as an assembly and an action of the Church. See his work Das christliche Kultmysterium , 1935', p. 27. For his teaching on the Eucharist more generally, see his works: Die Liturgie als Mysterier'feier, 5th ed. 1935, and "Die Kirche als Braut Christi nach Schrift, Va terlehre und Liturgie," in Theologie der Zeit, ed . Karl Rudolph, I, 1936, 91-111. 28 Cf. H . Fries, "Die Eucharistie und die Einheit der Kirche," in Pro Mundi Vita. Festschrift zum eucharistischen Weltkongress, 1960, p. 176. This study cam e to the attention of the present writer when his research had already been completed and submitted for examination. It is a noteworthy study, and its strong emphasis on the ecclesiological character of the Eucharist lends support to the present work. See esp. p. 169. 29 Undoubtedly, a major factor in this position taken by Western theology regarding the Eucharist was the w hole soteriology of the West as it developed from the Middle Ages on wards. The theo-
I I,
F "
EUCHARIST, BISHOP, CHURCH
77
7
Notes to Introduction
31
logical systems of the West saw man as being saved by a juridical action on God's part and did not regard as an absolutely basic necessity the "continuous, real and life-giving operation of Christ in the bodies of the faithful" (see j . Romanid es, The Original Sin (in Greek), 1957, p . 13f.) - the operation or energy w hich is o ffered par excellen ce th rough the Eucharist. On the relati onship between Church unity and Eucharist according to ancient and medieval church writers, see H. de Lubac, Katholizis11111s als Gemeinschaft, 1943, p .8lf. 30 See above, note 13, and V. Ioannidis, introduction to the New Testament (in Greek), 1960, p. 264 and elsewhere, and C. Konidaris, General Church Histon) from Jesus Chris t to our own times (in Greek), I, 2nd ed. 1957 (hereafter referred to as G.c.H.), pp. 102, 103f., 108 note 3, 109. See also eiusdem The Formation of the Catholic Church up to Ihe Beginning of the Fifth Century and the Three Hierarchs (in Greek), 1955 p . 18f. 31 Particularly, in regard to the relationship between the individual and the totality, which is essentially linked to the concept of unity, it should be noted that the presentation of this relationship as an antithesis in modern theology is frequently due to th e confusion we habitually make between the notions of "individual" and "person," treating the two as identical. The crucial distinction between individual and person has been to a great extent illuminated by modern existentialist philosophy (even though this distinction occurs already, from a different standpOint, in Thomas Aquinas) developed in modern times by j . Maritain (Du Regime temporel el de liberte, 1933). The individual is a natural category referring not only to man but even to inanimate objects. The person is a category proper to man, a concept which is spiritual and involves a va lue judgement, an expression of the purpose of existence, the image and likeness of God (c!. N. Berd yaev, Solitude and SOCiety, 1938, p. 168). Further, the individual is an arithmetical category, a concept relating to quantity. The person is a qualitative category which abolishes or transcends the laws of arithmetic. One person may be worth two or more individuals; and consequently the law of arithmetic accord ing to which two men are twice one man, while true for individuals, is not applicable to persons. Still more importantly, the individual contains the idea of combination and ultimately of serving a purpose. Ten individuals added together go to make u p a certain purpose (collectivism). By contrast, the person, as an image of God, cannot be a means to the realization of any end. Any exploitation of the person to achieve certain ends,
,
32
EUCHARIST, BISHOP, CHURCH
Notes to introduction
33
e~en the most exa lted, turns him into an individual and degrades
the paradox encountered in these texts that the many are expressed
him from the greatness of God's image. But the paradox in this distinction between individual and person is this: it seems at first sight that the person, as an end in himself, should always be understood in himself w hile the individual as being subject to combmatIon should be understood in relation to others; whereas, in actual fact the opposite is bue. For, although the indi vidua l can be added to other individuals, nevertheless, he cannot be really uIUt~d wIth others. In the words of M. Buber (l and TIIOU , 1958, p. 62): IndIvIdualIty makes Its appearance by its differentiation from o ther individualities." The person, by contrast, cannot be added and become part o f a whole since, as an end in himself, he constitutes the whole. Yet not only can he be really united with others, but he cannot even exist as person withou t unity w ith o thers: "A person makes his appearance by entering into relation w ith other persons" (ibid.). An essential element in the concept of person is his neflection in the other, the discovery of the '1" within the "Thou." This creates for the person the necessity of unity. Once the individual is isolated from other individuals, it finds its justification. Once the person is deprived of its communion w ith others, it meets its des truction . For the person canno t set boundaries around itself (egocentricity) without automatically becoming an individual: a part instead of a whole, a means instead of an end in itself. Thus, egocentricity is the death of personhood, while denial of the "I" and its placing w ithin the "Thou" and the "We" is its confirmation. (Cf. N. Nissiotis, Existentialism and Christian Faith (in Greek) 1956, p. 299: "as Christian personality, the bue subjectis conceived of and created in communion with other such persons who are called to salva tion"). In this way, the paradox is elucidated. Indiv idualism is the enem y of personhood and - however s trange this m ay seem at first sight - the essential concomitant of collectivism since the latter in a mechanical unity produced by adding together uruts mdependent of each o ther which serve as means to commo n ends. By contrast, unity as communion forms the confirm ation of personhood. Christi anity was identified from the beginning with the second kind of unity and for this reason required the burial of the "I" as individ ual in order that the "I" might be found as person in the "Thou" and the "we" of the Kingdom of God. In consequence, Christianity was a religion not of the individual but of the person whIch means a relIgIOn of unity. This is why the dilemma of mode~n . res~arc~ between individual and collective find s so many dIffIcultIes In the texts of early Christianity, and has trouble with
through the One and vice versa (see below). These texts have in view a situation of persons. In this s ituation, the relationship of the individual w ith the whole ceases to be an antithesis beca use through the burial of individualism, it is transfonned into a rela-
tionship of the person with the unity, in which, as has been said above, the person presupposes the unity and the uni ty the person. 32 To Orthodox theology, this seems at first glance a dash between two fundamen tal ecdesiological principles. Thus according to one of these principles, aba ndoned by Rome at the First Vatican Council, each bishop is absolutely equal to all the other bishops in every way as preSiding over a complete Church and not a partial Church; and according to the other, equally basic principle of Orthodox ecdesiology, all the Churches in the world make up only one Church. It is evident, then, that neither the Roman Catholic concept of the unity of incomplete parts (= local churches - bishops) added together in to a universal grouping (= universal Church - universal bishop), nor the Protestant concept of local Churches (~ communities) entirely independent of each other, accords with the ecdesiological principles of Orthodoxy. For this reason, the usual characterization of the local Churches as "particular" (epi merous) Churches can introduce the notion, foreign to Orthodox
ecc1esiology, of a unity of "parts," i.e. a unity formed by add ition. There is a manifest need to define the relationship of unity existing between the one Church in the world and the complete churches in various places from the v iewpoint of Orthodox ecclesio logy. 33 The Orthodox canonist N. Milasch, Canon Law of the Eastern
Orthodox Church (in Greek), 1906, pp. 294-298, holds that there is a purely spiritual unity on the universal level and independence in the administration of the local Churches. This position is based exclusively on the distinction between spiritual and administra-
tive unity. But o nce one main-tains the correct v iew that administration cannot be understood w ithout an ecclesiological bas is, then we have to ask ourselves: what are the fa cts of ecdesiology that support the administrative independence of each local Church? This is the heart of the problem. " J. Ka rmiris, The Ecclesiology of the Three Hierarchs (in Greek), 1961, p. 37, note 1: "From what has been said, we may draw the firm condusion that what happened at Pentecost was, to be precise, the official public appearance of the Church and th e inaug uration of her saving work, but not her rebirth or founda-
tion, as it is less that aptly put in our Dogmatics and Catechisms ... ";
34
E UCHARlST, BISHOP, CHURCH
Notes to Introduction
35
•
V. Ioannidis, "The Kingdom of God in NT Teaching," in EETh.5. 1956, p. 160: "So the Church already existed and jesus Christ was born and lived within this Church." Cf. also G. Konidaris, G.CH . pp. 85 and 101 . Likewise K Mouratidis, The Essence and Polity, p. 68 f., and L Kalogirou, On the Character of the Orthodox Catholic Church accordillg to the Basic Soteriological Principles in the NT, 1961, p. 16. Roman Catholic theology, toda y, also recognizes the existence of the Church before Pentecost See M. Schmaus, Katholische Dogmatik, III / I, 1958, p. 16 f. " V. Ioannidis, "The Kingdom of God" p . 131: "The entirely new and entirely different element that Christianity has to present relative to other religions, or to the teachings of th e prophets and later teachers in judaism, is not this or that teaching of jesus but the very person ofJesus Christ Himself." See likewiseG. Konidaris, G.CH . pp. 85 and 87, where the person of jesus Christ is seen as preceding and taking precedence over His teaching from the viewpoint of the historical foundation of Christianity. Cf. also the remark by WG. Kiimmel, ("jesus und die Anfiinge der Kirche," in Studia Theologica Cum Ordinum Theologorum Scandinavorum edita, VII / 1 1953, - 1954, p. 27): "It is not the teaching of jesus, but the person of jesus as the hidden Messiah-Man and the Risen O ne which became historically the root of the Church." 36 A highly illuminating and original interpretati on o f the ecclesiological passage Mt 16:18 is given by Prof. L Philippidis (Histon; of the N.T Period, 1958, p. 74 f.), according to which on the basis of the Hebrew term translated in Matthew's Gospel as "rock" (petra) , "when jesus said to Peter... [that] on this rock.. He would build His Church, He meant Himself... " This interpretation agrees with the biblical understanding of the Church as the Body of Christ and as His building-up and increase (see below). It is notable that the earliest church writers who spoke of the pre-existence of the Church, such as the author of 2 Clement (2:1 and 14:1), locate this pre-existence primarily in the person of the Lord (2 Clem. 2:3 and 7).
" See M. Siotis, History and Revelation .. ., 1953, p. 28. Cf. also the apt remark of T.W Manson, that Jesus taught His elisciple simply by being with them. Thus, He was not only the Teacher, but also the teaching (Ministry and Priesthood, 1958, p. 8 f.) . It is hence an observation of vital importance that "Christianity is not a world view or an ideology, as is commonly and inaccurately stated; it is no t a sterile system of religious knowledge and moral rules ... Anything that is a truth of faith and a rule of life circulates and appears
in the world "in person" . It is "in the person oflesus" that we see God and have the GospeL". Metropolitan Dionysios of Servies and Kozani, in Oikodomi: weekly written sermon ..., 1965, p . 223 f. cf. ibid. p. 139 f. 38 Tract. on the Gospel of John 21:8 (PL 35:1568. Cf. 35:1622 and 37:1679). Cf. likewise John Chrysostom, Homily on 1 Corinthians 30 WG. 61:249-253) and esp . Homily on Ephesians 3 WG. 62:29). Thus K Adam is correct in remarking (Das Wesell des KnlllOlizismus, 1927, p . 24), that "Christ the Lord is the proper 'I' of the Church." For the views of Roman Catholic theology on this subject see H . Schmaus, KnlllOlische Dagma tik, III / I, p. 9 f. J9 Cf. the fundamental remark of Prof. G. Florovsky: "The theology of the Church is nothing but a chapter, and one of the principal chapters, of Christology. Without this chapter, Christology itself would not be complete. It is within the framework of Christology that the mystery of the Church is proclaimed in the New Testament. It was presented in the same way by the Greek and the Latin Fathers." ("Le corps du Christ vivant," in La sainte Eglise universelle. Confrontation oecumenique, 1948, p . 12.) ., J. Mohler, Die Einheit der Kirche, 1824 (French translation by A. Libienfeld, L'unite dans rEglise in the series Unam Sanctam No. 2, to which we refer here), and A. Khomiakov, in W.J. Birkbeck, Russia and the English Church , 1895, Ch. 23. On a connection between Mohler' s ecclesiology and that o f Khomiakov, see G. Florovsky, o p . cit. p.1L Cf. also the critique of Khomiakov's ecclesiology by J. Romanides, "Orthodox Ecclesiology according to Alexis Khomiakov," in Greek Orthodox Theological Review 2 (1956), 57-73; alsoArchim. S. Charkianakis, On the Infallibility of the Ch urch in Orthodox Theology, 1965, p. 133 f., where in his very interesting critiqu e o f Khomiakov's theolo gy h e notes th e latter's "pneum atocratic ecclesiology" (pp. 138, 152), which should however be attributed primarily to a lack of the Christological approach which characterized the Fathers in their ecclesiology (el. the criticism of J. Romanides, op. cit p. 73). 41 See G. Florovsky, "Chris t in His Church . Suggestions and Comments," in 1054-1954. L'Eglise et les Eglises, II, 1954, p.l64. It is characteristic that the Pauline term "spiritual body" (1 Cor. 15:44) never took on an ecclesiological meaning as happened with the term "body of Christ." ., So the unity of the Church is defined in the Augsburg Confession. See Ch. Androutsos, Symbolics from an Orthodox Perspective, 1930', p. 96.
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Notes to Introduction
EUCHARIST, BISHOP, CHURCH
" See K. Mouratidis, The Essence and Polity... (in Greek) pp. 125-135. 44 1. Kanniris, Summan} of the Dogmatics of the Orthodox Ca tholic Church (in Greek), 1960, p. 80. Karmiris brings out the relationship between Eucharist and unity even more clearly and emph a tically in his article "The Body of Christ, Which is the C hurch" (in Greek), in Ekklesia 39 (1962), 365f., where he writes: "The Divine Eucharist is the centre of the unity of Christians w ith Christ in the body of the Church. For it is through this par excellence that the Church is revealed as the body of Christ and the communion of the Holy Spirit, and the 'present' age and world is joined w ith that which is to come, the earthly Church with the heavenly. In th e Divine Eucharist is contained the whole body of Christ..." 45 See ibid ., and inter alia M. Siotis, Divine Eucharist. N.T. illfor~
mation on the Divine Eucharist in the light of the Church's interpretation (in Greek), 1957, p. 69; P. Trembelas, Dogmatics ... , III, 1961, p. 154. Cf. G. Florovsky, "Le corps du Christ," p . 36 f.; J. Meyendorff, The Orthodox Church, p. 22 f.; as also G. Bebis, "The Divine Eucha rist accord ing to Patristic Interpretation," in Ekklesia 36 (1959), 143-145. .. See P.B. Schultze, "Eucharistie und Kirche in der russischen Theologie der Gegenwart," in Z.L.T., 77, (1955) 257-300 and E. Lanne, "Die Kirche als Mysterium in der orthodoxen Theologie," in Holbock-Sartory, Mysterium Kirche in der Sicht der theologischen Disziplinen, II, 1962, pp. 891-925. 47 Unfortunately, we do not have access to the works of these two theologians written in Russian, and have, therefore, drawn our information abou t their theory mainly from the following articles (as far as we know, only articles exist): 1) N. Afanassieff, "L' Apotre Pierre e t l'eveque de Rome," in Theologia 26 (1955), 464 f.; 2) eiusdem "La doctrine de la Primaute a la lumi ere de I' ecclesiologie," in Istina 4 (1957) 401-20; 3) eiusdem "The Church which presides in Love," in The Primacy of Peter in the Orthodox Church, ET 1963, pp. 57-110; eiusdem "Le Concile dans la Theologie orthodoxe russe", in lrenikon 35 (1962) 316 f.; 5) eiusdem, "Una Sancta," in Irenikon36 (1963), 436; 6) A. Schmemann, "Unity, Division, Reunion in the Light of Orthodox Ecclesiology" in Tlteologia 22 (1951) 242 f.; 7) eiusdem, "The Idea of Primacy in Orthodox Ecclesiology," in The Primacy of Peter (as above); 8) eiusdem, "Theology and Eucharist" (in Greek), in Theoloijl}, Truth and Life, (ed. Zoe Brotherhood) 1962, and 9) eiusdem, "Towards a Theology of Councils," in St Vladimir's Seminary Quarterly 6 (1962) 170-184. 48 As Prof. I.Karmiris puts it (Orthodox Doctrine of the Church,
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1964, p. 16), the Divine Eucharist constitutes "as it were the very mystery of the Church." Cf. G. Florovsky's commen t (in Ways of Worship, ed. P. Edwall et aI., 1951, p. 58): "The C hu rch lives in the Eucharist and by the Eucharist." "Cf. P. Trembelas, "Unacceptable Theories concerning the Una Sancta," in Ekklesia 41 (1964), 167 f. 50 Eph. 4:5 a nd 13. cf. Rom. 12:16; 15:5; 2 Cor. 13:11; Phil. 2:2; 4:2. 51 In 13:35; Eph. 4:16; 2 Cor. 5:14 and elsewhere. " Eph.4:5. 53 Thus a) on faith, the confession of faith and Holy Scripture see examples in K. Federe r, Liturg ie und Glaube. Eine theologiegeschichtliche Untersuchung, 1950, p.59f.; C.F.D. Moule, The Birth of the New Testament, 1962, and C. Peifer, "Primitive Liturgy in the Formation of the New Testament," in Bible Today, 1 (1962), 14-21; b) on love and the works of mercy inspired by it, see Acts 2:42, 4:32, Heb. 13:10-16, Jn 13:29, and also the institution of the agape or "love-feast" w hich was initially connected with the Eucharist. Cf. G. Williams, "The Role of the Layman in the Ancient Church," in Greek, Roman and Byzantine Studies 1 (1958), 33f.; O. Cullmann, Urchristentum und 'Gottesdienst, 1950, pp. 102-106 and B.O. Beicke, Diakonie, Festfreude lind Zelos in Verbindl/lIg mit der alchristlichen Agapenfeier, 1961, p. 24; c) on the connection between martyrdom and Eucharist see J. Betz, Die Eucharistie ... , p. 184f.; d) on the connection of worship as a whole with the Eucharist, see P. Trembelas, "The Divine Eucharist in its connection with the other Mysteries and Sacramental Rites" (in Greek), in Efcharisterion, Essays in Honor of Professor H. Alivizatos, 1958. pp. 462-472. 54 See N. Nissiotis, "Worship, Eucharist and Intercommunion: An Orthodox Reflection" in Studia Liturgica 2 (1963), 197 f. 55 The more general question of Church tmity, and the consciousness of it, in the context of the formation of the early Catholic Church, was first posed in Prof. G. Konidaris' study The Formation .. . p. 32, n. I. The present work appears as part of this broader subject, other aspects of which have been addressed in other works by this author. 56 Such a view necessarily belongs of course, within the biblical understanding according to w hich the mystical life of the Church in time and history is a "pledge" and "foretaste" of the life in the "age to come". See S. Agouridis, "Time and Eternity (escha tology and mysticism) in the Theological Teaching of John the Theologian," in E.E.Th.STh. IV (1959), 60. 57 The sacramental aspect of the elemen ts of the Eucharist is a l
38
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EUCHARIST, BISHOP, CHURCH
Notes to Introdu ction
subject in itself. On this see Professor M. Siotis, Efcharistia (in Greek), • passim. " The ea rly Church did not see the Eucharist only as a comm u nion in the " holy things", but mainly as a communion of the "holy ones" . See the excellent work of W. Elert, Abendmahl und
subject of Church unity, history and theology often touch on one a nother, given that the Church is a n integral reality, w hether she is understood as a conceptual or an empirical state, and her unity forms an inalienable element of her essence. This is w hy in the presen t case it becomes very difficult and often impOSSible to isolate the evolving "becoming" oftheChurch from her stable "bein g" w ithout the risk of misinterpreting or distorting his tory. .. Cf. G. Konidaris, On the Supposed Differellce, p. 23. 67 On the subject of the sources used for this study, it sh ould be explained here that we shall mainly be usin g those sources w hich are purely Christian and ecclesial. This is no t because we underrate the value of outside sources for the history of early Christianity such as th e Dead Sea Scrolls, but on account of the nature of our theme which relates mainly to the Church's self-understanding which can be reflected faithfully only in her own documents. Besides, theories about a direct relati onship between the Dead Sea Scrolls and the Church do not seem well-founded. On this subject see K. Stend ahl, "Kirche: II. 1m Urchristentum" in Die Religion in Geschichte lind Gegenwart, 3, Auf!. 1II (1959), 1300. But more generally, the relationship of these texts to the Holy Scriptures w ill remain unknown, as Prof. V. Vellas observes, until all the texts discovered are published in full, and others perhaps come to light (V. Vellas, Commentary all the Book o[Habakkuk (in Greek), 1958,30,43). In con sequence, it would be at least premature to place these texts
Kirchengemeinschaft in der alten Kirche hauptsnchlich des Ostens, 1954. The connection of the Eucharist w ith th e ministries in the Church (the Greek term liturge",a is indicative in itself) was only natural, given that "the Eucharist forms the centre of all life in the Church" (G. Konidaris, The Historian , the Church and the Content of Tradition during the First Two Centuries (in Greek), 1961, p. 8). The connection of the origin of Canon Law with the Eucharist had alread y been emphasized by R. Sohm (K. Morsdorff, "Altkanonisches Sakra me ntsrecht? Eine Anseinandersetzung mit den Anschauungen Rudolph Sohms liber die inneren Grundlagen ... " , in Studia Gratiana, I, 1953, pp. 485-502); but because of his ideas about the relationship between Law and Church (see note 19 above), he was not able to see in the sources all those elements which give the Eucharist ecclesiological content. For this reason, the whole question still remains open for the historian who perceives in the Eucharist an ecclesiological character. 60 See 1 Cor. 11. Cf. also below. 61 G. Konidaris, On the Supposed Difference in Forms ill the Polity 59
of Primitive Christianity, 1959. G. Konidaris, G.c.H. , p. 20 f. ., The view that the Church evolves, put forward by both Roman Catholic and Anglican theologians (see e.g. L. Cerfaux, La theologie de l' Eglise suivant s. Paul, 1948, p. 140; EM. Braun, Neues Licht auf die Kirche, 1946, p. 166; G. Dix, Jew and Greek, pp. 67 and 80), cannot be accepted without the gravest reservations. This cannot be a n evolution of the C hurch in her essence, but ra ther of her outer covering even though there are aspects and "coverings" of the Church' s essence which are inseparably bound up with that essence (e.g. the literary form of Scripture, the basic order of the Eucharist, the organization of the Church around the bishop, etc.) .. Cf. Y. Congar, The Mystery of the Church, 1960 and E H eiler, Urkirche lind Ostkirche, 1937, p . 826. 65 We have already made a distinction in principle between the history of unity and the theology of unity (see above, p. 12f.). Yet, despite the fact that it is imperative for this reason ca refully to distinguish wha t rela tes to the historical reality from what the early Church taught or aspired to, it must be admitted here tha t on the 62
alongSid e the already existing sources of primitive Chri stianity in
studying the unity of the Church. On the relation of the Dead Sea Scrolls to early Christianity, the interested reader may see, inter alia, P. Simotas, The Discoveries of Kirbet Qumran (in Greek), 1952; S Agouridis, "Judaic Eschatology in N.T. Times" (in Greek), in Theologia, 1956, p. 408 n. 2; eiusdem, The Dead Sea Scrolls and the N.T. (in Greek), 1959; A. Ch astoupis, The Dead Sea Scrolls in relation to Holy Scripture (in Greek), 1958; Th: Kirkasios, The Dead Sea Scrolls (in Greek), 1959; eillsdem. "The Damascus or Sadokic text" (in Greek), in Theologia (1960), 151-1 66; M . Siotis, The Dead Sea Scrolls. Story of their discovery alld Description (in Greek), 1961. 68 It shou ld be noted that many of the problems of systematic theology are later constructs of the philosophiz ing mind and not infreq uently altogether alien to the mentality of the early Church. Allowing these problems to interfere w ith historical research w ill not only fa il to serve contemporary Orthodox theology, which is trying to purge itseif of alien influences, but w ill do it great ha rm. " It should be noted that a full examination of the presupposi-
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Notes to Introduction
tions and foundations of the Church in the Eucharist and the bishop needs to go back into the history of Israel. The sources and the history of the Church demand such a connection between the Church and Israel, given that the primitive Church regarded herself as the tme Israel, and saw the Old Testament and the history of Israel as her own. In this regard, it is sufficient to read carefully the beginning of Paul's Epistle to the Ephesians (1:4), the beginning of Hebrews and John's Gospel, the genealogies of Jesus included in the Gospels of Matthew and Luke etc., to satisfy oneself that the primitive Church saw herself as an organic part of the history of Israel "from the foundation of the world," or as the very "seed of Abraham" (Gal. 3-4. Cf. In 5:39, 46). The Church had the same consciousness in the second century: 'We are the true race of Israel" (Justin, Dial. 1135:36 and 123:9), and also in the third: "to us the ... true Hebrews" (Origen, On Mart. 33). The Christological character of the G.T. was already stressed by the Fathers (Augustine, On Ps. 30, P.L. 36:244) and is underlined today by research (e.g . .L Philippidis, History of the N.T. Period (in Greek), p. 825 and V. Ioann.idis, "The Kingdom of God," p. 160. For this reason, it is strongly stressed today that from a methodological viewpoint too, the correct starting point for any discussion of primiti ve ecclesiology consists in the question: what does the Old Testament have to say about God and His people? (See R. Newton Flew, "Jesus and the Kingdom of God," in The Expositon) Times, (1934-35), 217). While recognizing this fact, we shall not go into a detailed investigation here of the his tory of Is rael, both because the Divine Eucharist and the Bishop make their appearance as historical institutions after the OT. period, and also for practical reasons. This subject will therefore be treated on its own in a special study to appear shortly. 70 See the formulation of the problem above, note 31. 71 It is not accidental that in 1 Clement (96 A.D.) it was called "the gifts of the episcope." See below for greater detail. " Research for th e present work had already been completed when A. Schmemann's study "Towards a Theology of Councils" was published (St Vladimir's Seminary Quarterly 6 (1962), 170-184). On the enormous importance of the question of the origin of the parish and the scant attention afforded it hitherto by research, he writes as follows (p. 177): "This process (which transformed the original episcopal structure of the local Church into what we know today as parish) although it represents one of the most radical changes that ever took place in the Church, remained, strange.as it
may seem, virtually unnoticed by ecclesiologists and canonists." 73 To determine what developments have occured, it will often be necessary to use sources la ter than the first three centuries. This is required sometimes because they throw light on earlier conditions, or else because by their contrast or agreement with the sources of the first three centuries, they either m ake clear what developm ents have taken place, or connect the later developments with the original situation. Sources later than the third century w ill be used in this way only insofar as this aids the investigation of problems which go back to the first three centuries. As to the uility of the Church from the fourth century on, a special stud y will be needed.
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PRESUPPOSITIONS The Relationship Between Church, Eucharist and Bishop in the Consciousness of the Primitive Church •
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1. The connection of the Eucharist with the initial appearance of the term "church" The ecclesiology of primitive Christianity was not abstract and theoretical but rather practical.' As a result, not only is there no definition of the Church in the sources, but there is not even a theoretical d escription of her. Out of the eighty or so passages in which the term ekklesia occurs in the New Testament, fifty-seven at least have in view the Church as an assembly in a particular place. If we try to group these passages und er different headings, we have the following picture: (a) those referring to the "Church" (singular) of a particular city;' (b) those referring to the "Churches" (plural) of an area wider tha n a city, or without sp ecifying a locality;' (c) those containing the term "Church" or "Church of God" without specifying a locality;' and (d) those containing the phrase "church in the household" (kat' oikon ekklesia)5 . Out of these passages, only those of the third group can be connected with the Church in an abstract or theoretical sense. For most of these, however, this is merely a first impression. Passages such as 1 Cor. 15:9, Gal. 1:13 and Phil. 3:6, where Paul says that he persecuted the "Church of God," have in mind specifically the Church of Jerusalem, where there was a "great persecution" during which "Saul la id waste the Church.'"
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Part One - Presuppositions
EUCHARIST, BISHOP, CHURCH
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In consequence, the term "Church" in these ancient texts normally describes the Church as a concrete reality in space. This observation should serve as our basis for tackling the question, introduced by modern scholarship,' of whether the idea of the "universal" or of the "local" Church came first in primitive ecclesiology.' But the pOint of altogether special importance is that it was not just any assembly, but strictly speaking, the eucharistic assembly that was called ekklesia of "Church." This is clearly shown by a careful examination of the information we can glean from the most ancient texts we have, namely Paul's Epistles. There are also other early Christian texts which concur with these, and those will be discussed later. The Epistles of the Apostle Paul (apart from the so-called Pastoral Epistles, which are personal in character' and therefore do not concern us directly), which are addressed to the Christians in various regions under the term "Church," presuppose certain specific circumstances in which the recipients would be appraised of their contents. These circumstances appear to be none other than the assembly of the Eucharist. As H . Leitzmann has observed,1O the greetings at the end of these Epistles show that they were intended to be read at the time of the Eu charist, and for this reason they would be an excellent guide in reconstructing certain parts of the ancient liturgy. II So when Paul writes, for example, "To the Church of God which is at Corinth,"!' this "Church" is first and foremost the actual assembly of the Corinthians gathered to perform the Eucharist. From certain observa tions on points which do not yet seem to have come to the attention of scholars, we may note the following phenomenon: while in referring to Corinth Paul uses the term "Church," when he is talking about Achaea he uses the term "saints." In other words, while he could most naturally have said: "To the Church of God which is in Corinth and Achaea," or simply "which is in Achaea" (given tha t this would be understood to include Corinth)," he makes a distinction between Corinth and Achaea, placing the "Church" in Corinth. This might perhaps be pure coincidence with no esp ecial significance, if it were not corroborated by almost all the
passages in which the term "Church" is used according to the categories given above." Thus whereas the Apostle uses
"Church" in the singular in all cases where he refers to the Church of a particular city, in cases where he is referring to geographical areas wider than the city he uses the term in the plural. The only
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possible explanation for this curiou s phenomenon is that for Paul, the term "Church" did not simply mean Christians in a genera l and theoretical sense, without regard to their eucharistic gathering at the time when the Epistle was read. Thus Corinth, as the recipient of the epistle at the eucharistic assembly, is called a "Church" by the Apostle. Achaea, by contrast, is not called a "Church," since it is not in eucharistic assembly at the time when the epistle was received. This occurs in the case of every region wider than a city. Hence Paul speaks only of "Churches" and not of a "Church" in the singular in such regions. This is the explanation for that characteristic feature of the Pauline vocabulary, namely that we never encounter in it "the Church of Macedonia" or "the Church of Achaea" or "the Church of Judea ." The Christians of these wider areas did not differ from those of a city in any other particular way that would allow u s to interpret this linguistic phenomenon in some other way. They, too, were full m embers of the Church just like those of Corinth. But because in these earliest times to which Paul's epistles belong, the word "Church" m eant principally, the faithful united in their eucharistic assembly. It was natural that for Paul and his readers the Church should be not in Achaea or some other area wider than the city, but in Corinth, i.e. in a specific city, because it was there that the assembly took place during which his epistles would be read. Su ch an identification of the Church with the eucharistic assembly, can be attested more clearly from a careful analysis of the content of the First Epistle to the Corinthians and particularly Chapter 11. In this chapter, the Apostle Paul gives the Corinthians practical directions relating to their assemblies for worship. A careful examination of the terminology u sed by the Apostle at this p oint leads u s to the following observations:
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Part One - Presuppositions
Althoug h, it is evident from the whole content of this chapter that Paul is speaking here about the assembly to perform the Divine Eucharist in Corinth, he nevertheless d escribes this assembly as a "Church": "when you assemble as a Church I hear that there are divisions among you" (v. 18). Reading this phrase of the Apostle Paul's, the C hristians of Corinth mig ht be expected to have asked, "What exactly does the Apostle m ean when he talks about "coming together as a Church"? Aren' t we a "Church" whenever we meet, and even w hen we do n' t come together in the sam e place?" This question, which seems so natural to twentieth-century Christians, did not concern the C hristians of the Apostle Paul's time. Indeed , from the passage it can be concluded quite na tura lly that the term "Church " was not used in a theoretical sense but to describe an actual meeting; and again not to d escribe just any sort of m eeting, but the one that Paul had in mind when he wrote the words quoted above - the assembly to perform the Divine Eucharist. Paul d oes not hesitate in the slightest to call this assembly "the Church of God": to despise the eucharistic assembly is to despise the very "Church of God" (v. 22). And going on to identify Eu charist and Church in a manner which is quite astonishing, he talks about the institution by Christ of the divine Supper, linking his reference to the "Church of God " with the subject of the Eucharist by a simple explanatory "for," as if it were one and the same thing: "For I received from the Lord what I also delivered to you" (v. 23), namely the celebration of the Eucharist. This identification of the eucharis tic assembly w ith the Church allows Paul to use the expression "coming together in the same place" (epi to auto) as a term having at once ecclesiological and eucharistic content. "When you come together in one place (epi to auto) it is not the Lord's supper that you eat" (v. 20), becau se, by the way you behave, "you d espise the Chu rch of God" (v. 22). "So then, m y brethren, when you come together to eat, wait for one ano ther ... lest you come together to be condemned ... " (vv. 33-34). 15 Thus, in the thou ght of Paul and the Churches which read his Epistles, the terms "coming together"
supper" (i.e. Divine Eucharist) and "Ihe Church" (ekklesia) or "the Church of God" mean the same thing.
or "coming together in the same place" (epi to auto), "the Lord's
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That the eucharistic assembly is identified with the very Church of God is also the conclusion that emerges from a study of the term church in the household (kat' oikon ekklesia) contained in the passages belonging to group (d ) according to our classification. 16 The significance of the term church in the household seems to be much greater than mig ht be su ggested by the number of passages in w hich it occurs. At a time when the Church was gradu ally adopting a technical terminology and did not yet have one fixed, no technical term could be universally applicable. I' Whereas, it seems that there were many such terms in u se locally, either temporarily, or for a long time until they became fully part of the worldwide vocabulary of Christianity.I' The term church in the household d id not survive in the vocabulary of the Church . The epistles of Paul seem to be the only sources in which it occurs. Two things, however, clearly demonstrate its impor. tance. Firstly, this term has the appearance of a u sage alread y established in the Pauline Churches at the time w hen Paul's epistles were being written. The fact that he u ses the term without any variation and never goes on to explain it presupposes a familiarity w ith the term o n the part of those who were reading the epistles. This m eans that in the Pauline Churches at least, this term had acquired currency as a technical term. Aside from this, the importance of the term lies in its relationship with the term "Church" which finally prevailed. What sort of Church d oes the church in the household represent? Stud ents of history are u su ally familiar w ith the local Church and the Church "throughout the world." Does the church ill the household constitute a third type of Church for primitive Christianity? This question does n ot seem to have been examined in d etail hitherto, so far as we know." One probable reason for this is the fact that the m eaning of the term is usually considered self-evident. But if we take into account the Significance of this term for the history of the unity of the Church, determining its meaning throug h detailed stud y becomes a necessity.
EUCHARIST, BISHOP, CH URCH
Part One - Pres uppositions
Many of the scholars who have been indirectly concerned with this subject seem to identify the church in the household with the "Christian family" in general, which is presented as a special unity within the Pauline local Churches." In this case, church is used in the widest sense of "Christianity" or "Christian community" (Gemeinde). Thus for example Michel, exploring the meaning of the terms oikos and oikia in the New Testament,21 collects all the passages referring to the "church in the household" together with those referring to Christian families and gives them all the common title of Gemeinde in Familien. This approach is in agreement with the older understanding of church in the household, according to which this term denoted the groups of Christians who gathered around strong personalities such as Philemon or Priscilla and Aquila and in which, so it was believed, the Church organi. zation and above all the bishop had their origin." T)lis inclusion of the "church in the household" among the passages which refer to the Christian family in general is also continued by later works," with the exception of the distinguished J. Jeremias, who studiously avoids using the passages which refer to the" church in the household" alongside those referring to Christian families generally." But is it correct methodology to examine all these passages together? Does the church in the household belong with the passages which refer to the Christian family in general? The answer is negative if we take into account the strict division 5t Paul makes between the house/ household (oikia) or Christian family and Church. Referring to the celebration of the Divine Eucharist in Corinth and the social distinctions which were being made in the course of it, he asks the members of the Church of Corinth: "Do you not have houses (oikiai) to eat and drink in? Or do you despise the Church of God and humiliate those who have nothing?" " Yet it is known that at the time the epistle was written and for a long while afterwards, the Eucharist was celebrated in Christians' houses. So while house and Church are linked by the Eucharist in practice, they constitute two different realities in the faith of the Church. The Church of God should not be con-
fused with the house; otherwise it leads to "despising the Church of God." Another example of this firm distinction between tile notions of house and Church is taken from 1 Timotily 3:4-5. This passage talks about the family of the "bishop." No other "household" or Gemeinde in Familien could be more Christian. Nevertheless, Paul not only refrains from calling it a "church," but clearly distinguishes it from the "Church of God": "A bishop must be above reproach ... he must manage his own household (oikos! well, keeping his children submissive and respectful in every way; for if a man does not know how to manage his own household, how can he care for God's church?" These two examples from the Epistles of Paul are sufficient for us to conclude that the distinction between the notions of Christian family (oikos, oikia, Gemeinde in Familien) and of church was so sharp in the mind of the primitive Church that identifying the notion of the "Church" with that of the "Christian family" would not have been possible. But in that case, what led these two different notions, of house and of church, to be joined together to form one term? The crucial factor is obviously the celebration of the Divine Eucharist. All ecclesial activities could be performed outside Christian houses. We know, for example, that preaching took place also in the synagogues. 26 And worship itself could in principle be performed in Jewish buildings, as we see from Acts 2:46. But there was one activity of the Church which never took place outside Christian homes: the celebration of the Eucharist." That this was due to strong convictions on the part of the Church and was not fortuitous is shown by Acts 2:46: "And day by day, attending the temple together and breaking bread at home (kat' oikon), they partook of food with glad and generous hearts .... " In this passage, the contrast should be noted: prayer could take place also in the Temple, but the 'breaking of bread," that is the Eucharist," took place in the Christians' homes. [28a see also Acts 20:7.] If we now take into account the identification of eucharistic assembly and local Church found in Paul,29 the meaning of the term in question becomes clear. The terms house and
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church expressed two different realities: the former something secular, and the latter a purely ecclesial reality. But w henever the Eu charist was celebrated in the hou se of a Christian family, the Church of God was automa tically linked w ith that household. The connection of the Eucharist both with that house and with the Church of God gave rise to the church in the hOl/sehold w hich took its name from the owner of the hou se.'" Thus the phrase church in the household refers to the assembly of the faithful for the celebration of the Eucharist. 3l If this assembly was called a church, this was because the assembly, epi to auto, for the celebration of the Eucharist w as also called a church (1 Cor. 11). In contrast with the other terms u sed for the Church, the term church in the household w as the most concrete expression of the Church, d enoting the assembly of the faithful in a particular place in order to be united in the body of Christ. In consequence, the church in the household ':Vas not a third type of Church, different from the "local" or the "universal," but the local Church herself or Church of God, breaking bread at the house of one of her members. So from an examination of the oldest texts of p rimitive Christianity, the Epistles of Paul, it transpires tha t the eucharistic assembly was identified with the "Church of God" herself. If we now examine those texts w hich are already seeing the end of the Apostolic period, su ch as the Revelation of John, we shall again have no difficulty in establishing the sam e identification of the eucharistic assembly with the C hurch of God . Written characteristically "on the Lord's d ay,"32 which is to say the day of the Eucharist par excellence," the Book of Revelation m oves w ithin the milieu and atmosphere of the eucharistic assembly to such an extent that scholars studying it are faced w ith the problem of whether the Eu charist influenced this book or vice versa." However that may be, it should be considered that there is a t least a "mutual" influen ce b e tween the Book of Revela tion a nd eu ch a ris tic worship" This book transports us from the Eucharist to the throne of God and from the Church on earth to the Church in heaven in su ch a way that we think it is one and the sam e reality. Indeed , the mystical identification of the C hurch in
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heaven before the throne of God w ith the Church on earth worshipping before the Table of the Eucharist is such as to call to mind the connection between these two aspects of the Church w hich only in Orthodoxy has been preserved in su ch d epth.36 C hapters 4 and 5 of Revela tion, to w hich we shall return later, m ake no sense w ithout the presupposition that the eucharistic assembly incarnates on earth the very Church of God. From this is becomes clear that from the first appearance of the term ekklesia there w as a m ost p rofound connection, even to the p oint of identity, between this term and the Eucharist celebrated in each city. Each such Eucharist constituted the expression in space and time of the Church of God herself.
2. The connection of the Eucharist with the original consciousness regarding the unity of the Church. The identification of the eucharis tic assembly w ith the C hurch of God herself in the use of the term chu rch would make no sense if there did not exist in pa rallel a very profo und connection betw een the Divine Eucharis t and the primitive Church's consciousness regarding uni ty. This connection, w hich extends beyond the terminology used for the Church into the early theology regarding the Church among the first Christians, is brilliantly expressed by the "theologian of unity" par excellence," the Apostle Paul. Addressing the Corinthians, the Apostle w rites: "Judge for yourselves what I say. The cup of blessing w hich we bless, is it not a communion (koinon ia) in the blood of Christ? The bread w hich we break, is it not a communion in the bod y of Christ? Because there is one bread, we w ho are ma ny are one bod y, for we all partake of the one bread ."" In this highly significant passage, the dominant idea is tha t "the man y" form "one bod y" identified w ith the bread of the Eucharist. Since this id ea was to have a decisive influence on the w hole fOllnation of the C hurch's unity, it is necessary to look at it in more detail at this point w hile we are examining the presuppositions of this unity. •
E UCHARIST, BISHOP, CHURCH
Part One - Presuppositions
The connection of the Divine Eucharist with the consciousness tha t the "m any" are united through it and in it into one body, and not just any body but the "body of Christ"39 - thus forming not "one thing" in the neuter but "one" in the masculine," the "one Lord" Himself" - is d eeply rooted right in the historical foundations of the Divine Eucharist and the Church alike. A careful examination of the texts referring to the Last Supper with which the origin of the Eucharist coincides his torically" shows convincingly tha t d espite their many differences on various points," they all agree on the connection of the Supper with the "many" or "you" (pl.), "for" or "in the place of" (anti or peri) whom the One offers Himself." This relationship of the "many" with the "One"" who offers Himself for them connects the historical foundations of the Eucharist with the Judaeo-Christian tradition of the servant of God or servant of the Lord" which again is c0'!11ected with Jesus Christ's understanding of Himself" and goes back to the p eople of Israel's consciousness of unity'" In this way, the connection of the Eucharist with the consciousness that the "many" are united to the point of identity with the One who offers himself on their behalf is shown to be as ancient as Christianity itself. This connection of the Divine Eucharist with a sense of the unity of the "many" in the "One," effected through the tradition of the "Servant of God ," is a lready firmly established in the consciousness and life of the primitive Church by the first century as shown by the oldest surviving liturgical texts after the Last Supper. Thus in the most ancient liturgical prayer of the Roman Church, which certainly goes right back to apostolic times and is preserved in 1 Clement (96 A.D.), we repeatedly read the phrase "of Jesus Thy Servant," clearly in connection with the hymns of the Servant of God in the Book of Isaiah." The same thing can be seen even more clearly in the eucharistic prayer of the Didache, also very ancient, where we read : "We thank Thee, holy Fa, ther, for Thy holy Name which Thou hast caused to make its dwelling in our hearts, and for the knowledge and faith and immortality which Thou hast made known to u s through
Jesus Thy servant."so This fact is of particular significance given that, as a rule, liturgical texts preserve very an cient traditions. If indeed this is coupled w ith the existence of the Servant of God tradition also in other very ancient hymns of worship, su ch as we m ost li kely find included in Paul's Epistle to the Philippians (2:6-11 ),51 the connection between the Divin e Eucharist and the Servant tradition should be considered something very ancient in the mind of the Church. In this way the "many" of the Servant tradition, the "many" of the Last Supper and the "many" of Paul's epistles meet and are identified with each other through the synthesis achieved by the systematic thought of the great Apostle \ when he writes, "". one bread, we who are many are one body, for we all partake of the one bread." But the connection of the Eucharist with the primitive Church's sense of the unity of the "many" in the "One" goes back to the historical foundation of the Church also by way of another fundamental tradition, that of the Lord as "Son of Man." This is especially true of the Johannine Churches, w hich, w hile not unaware of the connection of the Eucharist with the Servant of God tradition," nevertheless preferred, at least on the evidence of the Fourth Gospel, to connect it with the "Son of Man" tradition. This tradition, w hich also goes back to Jesus' understanding of Himself" and through it to the Judaeo-Christian foundations of the Church," has justly been regarded as the source of the idea of the Church. 55 For interwoven with this tradition, we find the paradoxical relationship of the unity of the many in the one which can be seen more generally in the Judaeo-Christian consciousness56 taken to the point of identity." This unity of the many in the "Son of Man" is first clearly linked with the Divine Eucharist in the Gospel of John. In the sixth chapter of this Gospel, which obviously refers to the Eucharist," the dominant figure is that of the "Son of Man." It is He who gives "the food w hich endures to eternal life."" In contrast with the m anna w hich God gave to Israel through Moses, this food is the "true bread," which as that "which carne down from heaven"'" is none other than the
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"Son of Man."61 Clearly, then, it is as "Son of Man" that the Lord appears in His relationship with the Eucharist in the Fourth Gospel. Hence, communion in the Eucharist is described there as eating not simply the fl esh of the Lord, but the flesh of the "Son of Man": "unless you eat the flesh of the Son of Man and drink His blood, you have no life in you."" In this cap acity, as "Son of Man," Jesus appears in the Fourth Gospel not only as identified with the bread of the Eu charist ("I am the bread of life")," but also as the reality w hich is par excellence inclusive of the "many": "he who eats m y flesh and drinks m y blood abides in me, and I in him ."" This abiding in the "Son of Man," though participation in the Eucharist is underlined in chapters 13-17 of the same Gospel, which move within the eucharistic presuppositions of the Last Supper and are so profoundly connected with the unity of the Church 's The insistent appeal, "Abide in me, and I in you"66 should no t be understood without reference both to the eu charistic • presuppositions of this text, and to the Lord's property of taking up the new Israel and including it within Himself'7 For all these reasons, the eucharistic character of the Fourth Gospel, which is increasingly being recognized," makes it a first class historical source for studying the presuppositions on which the formation of the Church's unity in the Divine Eucharist is based. Corning as an indispensable complement to those sources which inform u s about the mind of the Pauline Churches, it proves that despite being expressed in ways different from those we encounter in Paul's Epistles," the consciou sness was the same througho ut the primitive Church : through the Divine Eucharist the " many" - the new, true Israel, those who make up the Church - become a unity to the point of identity with Christ. All this d emonstrates how incomprehensible the whole ecclesiology of ancient Christianity becomes w itho ut reference to the Divine Eucharist particularly in anything to do with the notion of the Church's unity. The principal images used to depict and describe the Church in the New Testament'o are based on the relationship of the "many" with the "One," exactly as this is dictated by the eucharistic experi-
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ence of the Church. This is especially true of the descriptions of the Church as "body of Christ," " hou se" or "building" (oikodome), and "bride of Christ." The characterization of the Church as the "body of Christ," which has provoked much discussion among modern scholars," canno t be unders tood apa rt from the eu charis tic experience of the Church," which was most likely the source of the use of this term." Neither the parallels to this term fo und in Rabbinic sources," nor Gnosticism,'; nor other ideas from the Hellenistic milieu" could have lent this term to the primitive Church, given that its content in the New Testament is sui generis, characterized by its emphasis not on the idea of the "body," but on the accompanying genitive "of Christ." In other words, it is no t first and forem ost the body of Christians, but the body of Christ." This takes on its full meaning only within the context of the Judaeo-Christian traditio n with which, as we have seen, the Divine Eu charist was connected from the beginning. It is within this same tradition that the other ecclesiological images, too, take on their full m eaning. Thus the characterizatio n of the Church as a "building"" or "house"" does not imply som ething inanimate, but an organism living and growing"" to "mature manhood,"" "to the m easure of the stature of the fullness" of Chris!."" This is no t unrelated to the Divine Eucharist." In the spirit of the unity of the "many" in the One, we can also have a right understanding of the description of the Church as "bride of Christ," through which the faithful are understood as "members of Christ"" in a manner analogous to the union of husband and wife "into one flesh ."'" These ecclesiological images, of course, require special study which lies outside the scope and nature of the present work. But the point releva nt to the ver y close connection of the Divine Eucharist with the primitive Church's consciousness of unity, is this: that all these images become meaningless outside the ontological unity of the "many" in Chris!. Deeply rooted, as we have seen, in the historical foundations of Christianity, this unity found its fullest expressio n through the
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Divine Eucharist. The ancient Church was fully aware of this when she declared, through the first theologian of her unity, "we who are many are one body, for we all partake of the one bread."
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Chapter Two
THE
"PRESIDENT" OF THE E UC HARIST AS "BISHOP" OF THE "CHURCH OF GOD"
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1. The identification of eucharistic unihj1vith the canonical unity of the Church. The identification of the eucharistic assembly with the "Church of God" led naturally to the coincidence of the structure of the Church with that of the Eucharis t. It is a noteworthy fact that the Church was distinguished from the world around her as a sui generis unity mainly by forming a eucharistic unity· ' For precisely that reason, her organization, as will be shown below, was not borrowed or copied from the world around her, as historians have often contended,as but arose naturally out of the eucharistic assembly through which canonical unity is connected with the essence of the Church." The reconstruction of the image presented by the eucharistic assembly in Apostolic times in all its particulars does not concern us in the present work,'" As regards to the relationship of the Church's canonical unity with the Divine Eucharist, the existing sources allow us to make the following observations. Through her worship, and especially through the Eucharist, the primitive Church lived under the influence of an absolute theocracy. The whole of her worship is performed on earth, but forms a type of the heavenly worship where the throne of God dominates," In consequence, all authority in the Church is concentrated in the person of Jesus Christ. He is the one Lord, i.e, the only one who has power over all things, being exalted on the right hand of God ' 2H ence also, unity in one Lord'" is manifested first and foremost in wor-
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Christ. This makes the Church a theocratic unity."° But this authority of Christ was not expressed except through the ministers of the Church; the law of which had a human as well as a divine character. This was made possible mainly because of the Divine Eucharist which identified heavenly worship with earthly and Christ with His Church in a manner that was mystical and real. So thanks to the Eucharist and, therefore, chiefly in it, the various forms of ministry grew up in the primitive Church, and these in turn gave rise to the various "orders" in the Church and produced her law as a strictly Christocentric reality. All the ministries of Christ were reflected as historical realities in the C hurch in a way that created order and, therefore, "orders." In other words, while Christ was identified with the whole Church which was His body, and, therefore, all the members of the Church were "sharers in Christ/ ' III the powers or ministries of Christ were not expressed through all these members, but through certain ones. Thus Christ was regarded as the "apostle," but this did not mean that in His Body all were apostles l12 C hrist was the "Teacher," but in the Church there were not "m any teachers."113 H e was the deacon, but this property of His was expressed through a particular order which received a special charism for this.114 This held good for all the ministries of Christ which are mystically reflected in the Church. liS In the same way, the unity of the Church came to be the unity of a body, but in diversity of charismata l16 which is equiva lent to a unity in law and hierarchy. ' Thus, the Divine Eucharist through which C hrist was united to the point of identity with the Church, making it possible in this way for the charismata to be distributed , became not only the source of ca nonical unity, but also the chief area in which it was expressed l17 As we know from the First Epistle to the Corinthians, the diversity of gifts was manifested chiefly in the eucharistic assembly. But it was precisely there also that unity in ord er was manifested - the unity which Paul tries to reinforce still further by opposing the individualism of the charismatics and making the charismata
ship and especia lly in the Eucharist. As the one Lord, Christ is also the one ruler, again recognized as such primarily in the Eucharist." Precisely because of this position H e holds in eucharistic worship, Christ concentrates in Himself all the forms of ministry that exist in the Church. He is par excellence the minister," priest," Apostle," deacon," bishop," and teacher,loo "in everything being preeminent."IOI But here too, as has been remarked in another case/a) Christ is a great paradox in His relationship with the Church. While He is worshipped in heaven, He is at the same time present on earth and in the Eucharist,I03 thus transforming the heavenly state into an earthly and historical reality. Thus eucharistic worship on earth does not constitute a reality parallel to that of heaven, but is the heavenly worship itself (mystical identity). I'" In precisely the same way, the paradox of the relationship between Christ and the Church is also e)dended to the forms of ministry. The' fact that the ministries in the primitive Church were always understood in humility as "ministries of service" (diakoniail 105 does not mean that they were devoid of authority.l06 In precisely the same way as the heavenly worship was truly represented typologically in the Eucharist on earth so the authority of Christ was truly reflected in the ministers of the Church. The Church ministries, therefore, were not understood as existing in parallel with C hrist's authority,l07 but as expressing the very authority of Christ. As the one Lord and ruler of the Church, Christ does not govern in parallel with an ecclesiastical adminis tration on earth, but through it and in it. The ministries that exist are antitypes and mys tical radiations of the very authority of C hris t, the only minister par excellence. The rank of Apostle, for example, was not understood in the primitive Church as an authority existing in parallel with the authority of Christ, but as the very authority of Christ. 108 In a similar manner the bishop, as we shall see shortly,11l9 was understood as occupying the "place of God" and as the "image of Christ." In this way, Christ remained the only minister and the only o ne holding authority in the Church. Ministers had no authority except as images and representatives of I
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EUCHARIST, BiSHOP, CHURCH
subordinate to the unity of the Church which for Paul meant unity in orderY' The frequently attempted separation between spiritual gifts and order,1I9 even to the point of an antithesis such that order is seen as the destroyer of the spirit in the primitive Church,l 20 finds no basis in the sources of primitive Christianity. The division between charismatics and non-charismatics, introduced by Harnack, founders on the fact that the permanent ministers too received the gift of the Holy Spirit and were therefore considered charismatics. l2I The act of ordination by which the permanent ministers were "appointed" was nothing other than a laying on of hands to convey a special charism,122 one which remained permanently with the person ordained.123 Nor is there any serious basis in the sources for the idea, again introduced by Harnack, that the so-called "charismatics" took precedence in the early Church over the permanent ministers. Looked at in the light of the entire section of the Epistle concerning the eucharistic assemblies in Corinth, the passage in 1 Cor. 12:28 on which Harnack bases his thesis, is evidence that Paul did not have in mind a hierarchy such that the "charismatics" were placed above the permanent ministers. On the contrary, his whole purpose is to subordinate the charismatics to the "order" of the Church,'24 and this is why he places the gift of tongues, so dear to the Corinthians, right at the end of the list of gifts. The fact that Paul is not interested in that kind of order of precedence is further evident from several passages where he places the so-called "charismatics" after the permanent ministers who are regarded as "administrators."'25 The primitive eucharistic assemblies, in consequence, knew no antithesis between spirit and order, charism and hierarchy, because hierarchy and order without a spiritual charism were inconceivable at that time. 126
2. The elevation the "president" of the Eucharist to "Bishop" of the Church. What specific distinctions of "order" do we find, then, in the eucharistic assemblies of apostolic times? And how did they lead from the structure of the Eucharist to the perma-
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nent structure of the Church's unity? Again, the information available to us is severely limited by the nature of the sources. The actual situation in the Church of that period is known to us only from the Apostles, and this prevents us from seeing what exactly happened in the Apostles' absence. So what we discover is only the minimum of the historical reality. A fact which should make us wary of arguments from silence.!" From Paul's description of the eucharistic assembly in Corinth, we learn that the Eucharist involved all the members of the Church,'28 but within it there were those who gave their consent and confirmation through the" Amen." 129 So in the Eucharist there was, on the one hand, the order of offerers or leaders, and on the other, the order of respondents through the" Amen." Who exactly these leaders and respondents were, l Corinthians does not tell us. About a generation later in the Church of Corinth, we learn that there were two orders clearly distinguished from one another, the clergy and the laity, and that - significantly enough - the substance of these two orders is based on the place each of them occupied in the Eucharist. l3O When, in about the middle of the second century, the eucharistic assembly in Rome is described by Justin (and judging from 1 Clement which links Corinth and Rome, it cannot have differed from the practice in Corinth), the"Amen" attested in 1 Corinthians is placed in the mouth of the order of laity.l3l So insofar as we can throw light on the situation in Corinth around 55 A.D. through what we know from somewhat later sources,'32 the distinction between those who led the Eucharist and those who responded with the "Amen" sprang from the structure of the Eucharist to appear clearly a short time later (1 Clement) as the fundamental canonical division of the Church herself into clergy and laity. More particularly now on the question of the leaders of the eucharistic assembly, the apostolic period is again obscured by the shadow of the Apostlesl 33 From what the book of Acts tells us, we are obliged to accept that when the Apostles were present at a eucharistic gathering, they led the Eucharist. l34 It seems that the same applied to the itiner-
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ant "prophets," judging from what we are told by the DidacheDs But, whenever the Apostles were absent, which was most of the time, leadership of the Eucharist naturally belonged to the permanent ministers. Here, again, there is an impenetrable historical problem, because the information we have is sporadic. When the Twelve disappeared from the historical scene in a highly obscure manner, we find leadership of the Church of Jerusalem in the hands of James and the presbyters. ' 36 These presbyters may have existed in the Church of Jerusalem before James took over its leadership.137 Appearing there in parallel are the "deacons,"'38 an institution not unrelated to the common tables, with which the Eucharist too was connected at that time. 139 Thus, the Church of Jerusalem was headed by the triad: James - the presbyters - those who serve (diakonounies), I40 which probably replaced the scheme: the Twelve (or the Apostles) - the presbyters those who serve. This may have formed the model also for the organization of the other Churches which received Christianity from the mother Church of Jerusalem 1 41 As we can know, today, thanks to the research of Professor G. Konidaris,' 42 this triad was the first linguistic form under which the Bishop appeared in history as a specific and complete rank, initially known only by the personal name of the office-holder and implicit within the collective term "the presbyters" whenever there was no reason to single him out. It follows that the office of Bishop exists even in the apostolic period, overshadowed by the institution of the Apostles' 43 and linked with the presbyters and deacons, either (more rarely) through the scriptural expression "Bishops and deacons,"l" or (more commonly) through the everyday expression "the presbyters." That the Bishop, surrounded by the presbyters and deacons, was from the beginning the leader of the Eucharist is shown by the existing texts even though they do not provide us with clear evidence as to who exactly offered the Divine Eucharist. A careful examination of the sources leads to the conclusion that the Divine Eucharist could be offered principally and par excellence a) by the Apostles or other
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charismatics such as the prophets, and b) by the Bishop, surrounded by the presbyters and deacons. Texts such as the Acts of the Apostles, 1 Clement and the Didache point in the former direction. In Acts (20:11), we read that Paul celebrated the Divine Eucharist in Troas on the occasion when the youth Eutychus accidentally fell from the third floor room where the Christians had gathered to "break bread." Again, 1 Clement talks about a "ministry of the apostles."'45 What was the nature of this ministry in which the Apostles were succeeded by the presbyters of Corinth who had been dismissed? Even though the term "ministers" is used by Clement in a variety of ways,l46 as used here of the Apostles it has the specific meaning of offering the Gifts of the Eucharist. The ministry of the Apostles which had been given to the dismissed presbyters was the offering of the Gifts; this is why it was considered "no small sin" to dismiss them from it.147 It follows that the Apostles had the right among other things to offer the Divine Eucharist whenever they were at any Church. It is possible, indeed, that each Church had a special place at the table of the Divine Eucharist which would be used by the Apostle whenever he visited; and that later, once the apostolic generation was gone, this became not simply the exclusive locus of the Bishop, but also the most vital symbol of his succession from the Apostles. 148 This probability stands, whether we accept the theory first put forward by C.H. Turner,!" according to which apostolic succession was understood in the early Church as meaning that the Bishop of a local Church traced his succession back, not to the Apostles in general, but specifically to the apostle and the apostolic foundation of the local Church over which he presided - or whether we accept the opposite view upheld by A. Ehrhardt and other historians,!so according to which the succession was seen as a succession from all the Apostles. In either case, it does not alter the fact which interests us here, that apostolic succession as an historical fact stemmed from the Divine Eucharist, in the offering of which the Bishops succeeded the Apostles. This becomes clear from studying 1 Clement where the meaning of succession from •
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the Apostles revolves exclusively around the ministry of "offering the Gifts." A similar conclusion is to be drawn from studying the Didache. In this text, the Divine Eucharis t appears as a ministry of the prophets too,l51 w!tich permits the conclusion that charismatics generally were able to offer the Divine Eucharist when they were visiting a local Church . Despite t!tis, however, two historical facts s hould be taken into consideration before drawing m ore general conclusions. Firstly, it should be borne in mind that m any local Churches were not fo unded directly by the Apostles, but by missionaries w ho came from other Churches. As to the meaning of apostolic su ccession, this fact does not change things because by tracing his su ccession back to the apostolic foundations of !tis Church, the Bishop would ultimately go back to the apostle of the Mother Church from w hich !tis own Church had received Christianity. But as regards the unity of the local C hurch and its rela tion to the p e rson offering the Eucharist, this fact is of particular importa nce as we shall see. A second his torical fact which s hould be taken into consideration here is that even in those Churches w !tich had been founded by one of the Apostles not all the charismatics were connected permanently with the local Church. Furthermore, w hich is more important, that at an early d ate the Ap ostles and charismatics started to disappear and be replaced in all their minis tries by the p ermanent p asto rs of the local C hurch .l52 In view of these facts, the Apostles and other charism atics cannot be regarded as figures connected p ermanently with the offering of the Divine Eucharist in the local Church and, therefore, capable of expressing her unity. This was the task and character of the p ermanent ministers of the local Church and in particular the Bishop . The task of the Bishop was from the beginning princip ally liturgical cons is ting in the offering of the Divine Eucharist. T!tis is attested in very early texts. If we combine the information Ignatius gives us abou t the Bishop w ith the image of the eu charis tic assembly tha t the author of the Apocalyp se has in mind (late first century), we see that the Bishop is described as "presiding in the place of God ,"153
Part One - Presuppositions
67
precisely because in the eucharistic assembly he occupied that place, w hich the Apocalypse d escribes as "the throne of God and of the Lamb" in the heavenly assembly, the image of which the Apocalypse takes from the celebration of the Divine Eucharist in the Church .I" The very title of "Bishop " (episkopos) is u sed by Ignatius most p robably because, in keeping with !tis whole theology, the episkopos par excellence is God , Whose p lace in the eucharistic assembly was now occupied by the Bishop w ho presided over it. l55 Everything in the vision of the Apocalyp se revolves around the altar which is before the throne of God. Before it stands the multitude of the saved , and around the throne in a circle the twenty-four presbyters. The metaphor is plainly taken from the eucharistic assembly at w!tich the Bishop sat on !tis throne before the altar w ith the presbyters in a circle around !timl" and the people in front of 1tim.157 T!tis was from the beginning the place the Bishop occupied as the one w ho offered the Divine Eucharis t, and for this reason the Church saw him as the image and type of God or of Christ. 158 The basis for this vivid consciousness in the Church lay in the understanding of the Di v ine Eu charis t as the Bod y o f C hris t in b o th the Christological and the ecclesiological sense.l59 In the Divine Eucharist, the Church w as m anifested in sp ace and time as the body of Christ, and also as a canonical unity. In this way the unity of the Divine Eucharist beca me the font of the Church's unity in the body of Christ, and also of her unity "in the Bishop."I60 How the unity of the Catholic Church was established and took shape on the basis of t!tis reality w ill be the subject of our enquiry in the chapter s w hich follow. q50
To summarize the conclusions of the first part of t!tis study, we observe that the Divine Eucharist was from the beginning identified w ith the Church of God . Through this link w ith the consciousness that in Christ the "man y" are united in the O ne, the Eucharist appeared as the !tighest expression of the Church as body of Christ. Thus, in the earliest historical d ocuments, Paul's Epistles, the eu charistic assembly is
,
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unreservedly identified with the Church of God which is in a given city. Identification of the eucharis tic assembly with the "Church of God " led automatically to the coinciden ce o f eu charistic unity with the basic canonical unity of the C hurch. The division of those taking part in the Eucharis t into those who led and those who responded with the" Amen " appeared already in the first century (1 Corinthians a nd 1 Clement) as a clear and now permane nt canonical divis ion of the members of the Church into clergy and lai ty. At the same period the " president" of the eu charistic assembly, as occupying the "throne of God" in the aitar, was elevated in the consciousness of the Church to the one who was seated "in the place of God." In this way, the unity of the Church in the Eucharis t a utomatically became a lso a unity in the "Bishop.n These general presuppositions of the first three generations or so of C hristianity formed th e bas is for the further formation of the unity of the Church in the Divine Eucharist and the Bis hop. NOTES TO P ART O NE
, The distinction between theoretical and practical ecdesiology is intended here to underline the fact that the first theology conceming the Church did not develop as speculation about the idea or the concept of the Church, but initially appeared as an experience of a reality; a state, in which Christians were continuously living. The conscious recognition of this sta te and the subseque nt expression of the consciousness w hich had been created constituted the first theology of the Church, ex pressed through images which d escribed but did not define the reality which the Christians lived . Thus, the theoretical theology of the Church did not precede the historical events and institutions of the Church's life. On the contrary, the events and experiences of the Church, consciously recognized by her, led gradually to theoretical th eological formulations. This has particular Significance from the point of view of method ology, especially for this stud y, which examines the unity of the Church, starting not from the theoretical teaching on unity m the sources, but from those events, institutions and experiences,
69
the consciousness recognition of which led the early Church to ecclesiological formulations of a purely theoretical character. 2 Rom. 16:1; 1 Cor. 1:2; 2 Cor. 1:1; Col. 4:1 6; 1 Thes. 1:1;Acts 8:1 and 11:22. 3 Gal. 1:2 and 22; 1 Thes. 2:14; 2 Cor. 8:1; 1 Cor. 16:19; Acts 15:41 and 16:5; Rom . 16:16; 1 Cor. 11 :16 and 14:33-34. 'Mt. 16:18 and 18:17; Acts 5: 11; 8:3; 9:31; 12:1; 12:5; 11 :26; 14:23; 14:27; 15:3; 15:4; 15:22; 18:22; 20:17; 20:28; 1 Cor. 6:4; 10:32; 11 :18; 11 :22; 12:28; 14:4; 14:1 2; 14:19; 14:23; 14:28; 14:35; 15:9; Gal. 1:13 and Phil. 3:6. 5 Rom. 16:5; 1 Cor. 16:19; Col. 4:15; Philem. 2. 6 Acts 8:1-3. The same is tru e of most of the passages in category (c). An exception could be made only for the passages Mt. 16:18; Acts 9:31; 20:28 (?); 1 Cor. 10:32 (?); and 12:28 (?) which are
also the only ones which ma y not have in view the Church as a concrete local reality. 7 It should be stressed that the problem as it is posed tod ay does not stem from the texts but is artificial given that the antithetical scheme "localism vs. universalism" was alien to the mind of th e primitive Church (see above, p . 21 ). 8 The view that the "universal" Church precedes the "local" is held by (among others) P. Bratsiotis, " The Apostle Pa ul and the Unity ofthe Church" (in Greek), in f.E.TIt.S. (years 1957-58), 1959, p. 154; R. Bultrnann, "The Transformation of the Idea of the Church in the History of Early Christianity," in Calladiall Journal of Theology 1 (1955),73-81; and A. Medebielle in Dictiollllaire de la Bible, Suppl. Il, 1934, 660 and 668. The opposite view is taken by J. Y. Campbell, "The Origin and Meaning of the Christian Use of the Word Ekklesia," in Journal of Theological Studies 49 (1948), 130 f. and 138; K. Schmidt, "Ekklesia" in T. W.N.T. , lll, 503; and L. Cerfaux, La Theologie de rEglise... For a full bibliog raphy, see K. Stendahl, "Kirche .. ," col. 1303 f. 9 G. Konidaris, Oil the Supposed Differellce, p. 29. W Messe WId Herreumahl, 1926, p . 237. 11 This reconstruction is attempted by Lietzmann (Ibid.) " 2Cor.1:l.
On the boundaries of Achaea at this time see G. Konidaris, Church History of Greece, i, 1954-60, pp. 44-47. 13
See above, notes 2 and 3. " Cf. verse 29, where "coming together unto jud gem ent" is clearly connected with being a communicant of the Eucharist. 16 See above, note 5. 14
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71
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Notes to Part One
Most probably, even the term "church" h ad not yet prevailed everywhere as a technical term when Paul's Epistles were being
names of their owners (5. Clementia etc.). On these churches, e1. J.A . Jungmann, The Early Liturgy to the Time of Gregory the Great, 1959, p.13. 31 This view is expressed, but wi th no reasons given, by L. , Cerfau x, La Theologie de l'Eglise, p . 145 and P. Trembelas, "Worship in Apostolic Times in Theologia 31 (]960), 183. J2 Rev. 1:10. " ct. D. Moraitis, The Liturgy of the Presanctified (i n Greek), 1955, p. 12 f. " See P. Bratsiotis, The Revela tion of the Apostle Joll/! (in Greek), 1950. " !bid. p. 51. " See P. Bratsiotis, "L' Apocalypse de Saint Jean dans Ie Culte de l'Il glise Grecqu e Orthodoxe," in ReVile d'Histoire and de Philosophie religieuse, 42 (]962), 116-1 21. 37 V. Ioa nnidis, "The Unity of the Church ... " (in Greek), p . 172. JS 1 Cor. 10:15-17. ct. P. Neuenzeit, Das Herrenmahl. Stlldien zll r Paulinischen Ellcharistieauffassllng, 1958; K. Rahner, "Kirche und Sakra m e nt," in Geist und Leben 28 (] 955) , 434 f. a nd R. Schnackenburg, Die Kirche im "Neuen Testament, 1961, p. 41 f. " 1 Cor. 10:16, taken together w ith 12:27 and Eph . 1:23; 4:12-16; 5:30; Col. 1:18-24. 40 Gal. 3:28. Cf. 2 Cor. 11 :2. 41 Eph. 4:5. 42 See M. Siotis, Divine Eucharist (in Greek), p. 50 f. 43 Histo rical and literary differences of a liturgical character between these texts do not concern us here. On these see Lietzmann's work Messe etc. See also J. Betts, op. cit. p. 4 f. and especially D. Moria tis, History of Christian Worship. Ancient Times (First to Fo urth Century) (in Greek), 1964, p . 56 f. .. See Mk 14:24; Mt. 26:28; Lk 22:20 and 1 Cor. 11 :24. 45 ct. also H . Fries, "Die Eucharistie und die Einheit der Kirche," in Pro Mundi Vita. Festschrift zu m eucharistischen Weltkongress, 1960, p. 165f. 46 On this connection see J. Betz, "Eucharistie," in L.T.K., III, 1959, col. 11 43. 47 The ide ntity of the Serva nt o f God is clearly applied by the Lord to Himseli in Lk. 22:37 (= Is. 53:12), as also in all the passages concerning the sufferings of Jesus, while the correspondence between the story of the Servant and the account of the Lord 's Passion is amazing (Mt. 27:38 or Mk 15:27 or Lk. 23:32 f., 39 = Is. 53:9). The view of this passage by modern exegetes as a va ticinia ex eventu
17
written.
Thus, for ins tance, the te rms "Chris tian ity." "Catho lic Church," "Bishop," etc., which first appea red in purely local usage in Antioch and soon became technical terms for the entire Church. Cf. G. Konidaris, On the Supposed Difference, p. 45f. 19 It is worth noting that one does not find an examination of "church in th e household " eithe r in H . Strack-Po Bille rbeck, KOlllmentar zum N. T., III, 1926, nor in the entry "ekklesia" in Kittel, 18
T.WNT. 20 E.g. "th e household of Stephanas" (1 Cor. 1:16 and 16:15), of Crispus the ruler of the synagogue (Acts 18:8), of Lydia in Thya teira (Acts 16:15), of Narcissus and Aristobulos in Rome (Rom. 16:10-11). etc. 'I T. WN. T. , V, p. 132 f. 12 See e.g. K. Hase, Kirchengeschichte, I, 1885, p. 210. ct. also Winderstein, Der Episcopal, p . 38 el infra. ". E.g. E.A. Judge, The Social Pattern of Christian Groups in Ihe Firsl Century, 1960, pp. 30-39. ,. Je remias, J., Hat die liltesle Christenheil die Kindertaufe geub!? , 1938 (1 942' ), a nd more recently Die Kindertaufe in der ersten vier Jahrhlmderten , 1958. " I Cor. 11:22. 26 Acts 9:29; 13:14,45; 14:1; 17:1-2, 10, 17; 18:19; 19:8. l7 In Acts 5:42 we find Temple and house linked : "And every d ay in the temple and at home they did n ot cease teaching and preaching Jesus as the Christ." But this linkage refers to preaching. It should b e n oted that nowhere do w e find such a linkage in connection with the Eucharist; the exclusive place for which was the Christian home. 28 That this refers to the Eucharist is agreed by most modern scholars. See e.g. A. Arnold, Der Ursprung des christlichen Abendmahl in Lichts der nellsten liturgiegeschichtlichen Forschung, 1932, p p. 43-47; W. Goosens, W., Les origines de l'E ucharistie, 1931, pp. 170-174 andJ. Gewiess, D ie urapos tolische H ei/sve rkundig ung nach der Apostelgeschichte, 1939, 99.152-157. 29 See above, p. 461. 30 E.g. "the Church in your [Philemon's] household" (Philem . 1:2) or "the C hurch in their [Priscilla and Aquila's] household" (Rom. 16:5). The houses from the first four centuries found in Rom e by arch aeologists, wh ich had been turned into churches, bore the
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(e.g. R. Bultmann, Geschichte der synoptischen Tradition , 1951, p. 154 and Theologie des N. T., I, 1953, p. 30), runs into insuperable difficulties, on w hich see O. Cullmann, Die Christologie des N.T. , 1957, p . 63f. More generally on the significa nce, only recently recognized, of the figure of the Servant in the Gospels, see W Zimmerli - J. Jeremias, "?AI?," in T.WN.T. , V, 636 f.; H .W Wolff, Jesajia 53 im Urchristentum , 1950' ; and O. Cullmann, "ji'sus, serviteur de Dieu," in Dieu vivan t 16 (1950), 17 I. 48 The people of Israel appeared from th e beginning as a strong unity in the formation of w hich strong religious and ethnic figures such as Moses and David had been a con tributory factor. See V. Vellas, Personalities of the O.T. (in Greek), I, 1957', pp. 58, 66, 70, 80f. 121 etc. This unity was considered so profound and strong as to make the people of God one entity in it, relationship with its God. H ence, the repeated description of Israel in the OT through images of living organisms such as the vine (Is. 5:1 f., H os. 10: 1-2, Jer. 12:10, Ezek. 15:6), the cedar (Ezek. 17:22), the olive tree (Jer. 11:16), and indeed the son (Ex. 4:22-23, H os. 11:1, Is. 49:14 etc.) and wife of God (Jer. 31 :32, Masoretic text). It was w ithin the context of this sense of orga nic unity that there arose the tradi ti on of the Servant o f Yahweh of which we get a clear picture in the Book of Isaiah, 40-55. The discussion of how this figure is to be interpreted belongs to others (see. V. Vellas, op. cit. p. 295 f.; P. Bratsiotis, The Prophet Isaiah (in Greek) 1956, p. 8 and N. Bratsiotis, The Position of the Individual in the O.T. (in Greek), !. Introduction, 1962). But rega rdl ess of whether the individ ualis ti c or th e "collec tivist" interpretation of this paradoxical figure is correct, the re lationship to the point of identity between the Servant and the "many" whose sins he takes upon himself is a clear characteristic of this figure. This is recognized today not only by Protestant theology but by Roman Catholic theology as well, as shown by J. de Fraine's work Adam et son Lignnge: Etudes sur In "Personalil/i Corporative" dans la Bible, 1959. This interpretation does not necessarily vitiate the individual charac teristics of the Servant, which are beyond doubt, as V. Vellas proves (op. cit. p. 295 1.). 49 1 Clem . 59:2-4. 50 Didache 10:2. Ct. also 9:2: "We thank Thee, our Father, for the holy vine of David thy servant (pais) , w hich Thou hast made known to us through Jesus Thy servant." On the identification of both of these passages as Eucharis tic texts see J.P. Audet, La Didach
51
73
On the phrase "taking the form of a servant" as an allu sion to
the tradition concerning the Servant of God, see E. Lohmeyer, Gottesknecht I1nd Davidsohn , 1945, p. 3 f. The same idea is also im plied in Rom. 5:19 through the prominence given to the relationship of the "one" with the "many": "by one mail's obedience many w ill be made righteous." This is a clear reference to Is. 53:11 w here the Servant is presented as the one through w hom "many" are justified. ;, When the Lord is likened to the "lamb, w ho takes away the sin of the world" in Jn 1:29 and 36 (d. also 19:36), this is a reference to the Servant w ho, in Is. 53:7, is likened to a "sheep." The sa me characterization is also prevalent in the Book of Revelation which is now clearly linked with the Eucharist by the fact that Christ who is offered is likened to a "lamb." 53 The use of this title to denote the person of Jesus is so frequent in the Gospels (the term appears 69 times), occurring exclusively in the mou th of the Lord Himself, that many scholars consider this attribute "Son of Man" to be the most authentic expression of Jesus' understanding of Himself. (See e.g. J. Hering, Le royaume de Dieu et sa venue, 1952', p. 11 f. and S. Mowinckel, He that Cometh, 1956, p. 445 f. The rejection of the Christo logical sense of the term on literary grounds originated with H . Lietzmann, in his youthful work Der Menschensohn. Ein Beitrag zur neutestamentIichen Theologie, 1896, the reason being that the Aramaic term barnasha means simply "man" (Menschenkind ); this view was later abandoned by Lietzmann himself, but found a s upp orter in J. Welthausen (Skizzen und Vorarbeiten, VI, 1899, p. 187; d. also P. Feine, Theologie des N.T., 1934, pp. 57-70. Tod ay, so m e re ject the C hristological sense of the term on the basis of textual criticism in those passages which refer to Jesus' activity on earth, "Son of Man" being thus seen as a property of Christ's future coming (see e.g. R. Bultmann, Geschichte... , 1958, pp. 124, 128, 163, 171 etc.; H.E. Todt, Der Mel/schensohn in der synoptischell Oberlieferung, 1959, pp. 197-201 and J. H ering, op. cit. p. 142). Some scholars are also dubious about the passages referring to the future coming of the "Son of Man." So P. Vie lhaue r, "Go ttesreich und Menschensohn in d e r Verkundigung Jesu s', in Festschrift fiir G. Dehn , 1957, p. 51 f.; H.H. Conzelmann, in Zeitschrijt jlir Theologie urld Kirche, 54 (1957) 277 I. and P. Winter in Theolog. Liternturzeitung 85 (1960), 745 I. H owever, the objections of these liberal commentators conflict w ith the idea of a "hidden Messiah," who has an awareness of his identity as "Son of Man" but does not reveal it fully before his future coming
,
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Notes to Part Ol1e
(see E. Sjoberg, Der verborgene Menschensohn in den Evangelien , 1955, p. 120 f. Cf. E. Schweitzer, "Der Menschensohn," in Zeitschrift flir die net/test. Wissenschaft 50 (1959) 185-209). Besides, the Lord's identification of the "Son of Man" who w ill come in glory "on the clouds of heaven" w ith the humiliated Jesus on earth is clear in such passages as Mk 8:31; 10:45; Mt. 8:20 etc. On this identification see also A. Papageorgakopoulos, The Son of Man (in Greek), 1957, p.65 f. 54 The tradition probably goes back to the Book of Daniel (7:13 f.). Cf. J. Coppens, "Le Fils d 'Homme Danielique et les Relectu res , de Dan. 7, 13 dans les Apocryphes et les Ecrits du N.T.," in Ephemerides Theologicae Lovanienses, 37 (1961) 37. 55 Earlier by F. Kattenbusch, "Der Quellort der Kirchenid ee," in Harnack-Festgabe, 1921, p. 143. See also more recently Y. Congar, The Mystery of Ihe Church, 1960, p. 85 f. 56 This gave rise to the theory of "corporate personality," th e chief exponents of which were J. Pedersen, Israel: Its Life and Culture, 1926; H . Wheeler Robinson, The Hebrew Conception of Corpora te Personality (Werden und Wesen des A.T. Wissenschaft), 1936, p . 49 f. anel A.R. Jolmson, The One and the Many in the Israelite Conception of God, 1942. An extension of this theory to the whole of the Bible has been attempted more recently by both Protestant theologians (e.g. O. Culimann, Christus und die Zeit, p . 99 f.) and Roman Catholics (e.g. de Fraine, op. cil.). On the O.T. , d. also N. Bratsiotis, op. cit., p. 22 f. 57 Su ch appea rs to be the relationship between the "Son of Man" and the "people of the saints" in Daniel 7:13-27. In the N.T., this sa me relationship is clearly presented in the depiction of the Judgement (Mt. 25:31 -46) w here the "Son of Man" identifies Himself completely w ith the group of " the least of these m y brethren" (vv. 40 and 45). Cf, w ith certain reservations, the interpretation of T.w. Manson, Ihe Teaching of Jesus, 1955, p. 265. 58 See M. Siotis, Divine Eu charist (in Greek), p . 33 f. Cf. H . Fries, lac. cit., p . 170 f. 59 In 6:27. 60 In 6:51. 61 The principal characteriza tion of the "Son of Man" in the Fourth Gospel is as "he who d escended from heaven." See In 3:13, w here the phrase "h e w ho d escended from heaven" is followed by the explanatory phrase " the Son of Ma n." 62 In 6:53. 63 In 6:48. M In 6:56. One indication of the connection in the Fourth Gospel
between the "Son of Man" and the idea of the identity of Christ w ith the Church is the curious interchange between "I" and "we" inJn 3:11-13: "Truly, truly, I say to you, we speak of what we know, and bear w itness to what we have seen; but you d o not receive our testimony. If I have told you earthly things and you do not believe, how ca n you believe if I tell you heavenly things? No one has ascended into heaven but he w ho descended from heaven, the Son of Man. " It should be noted that he re again the "Son of Man" is mentioned. Cf. chara cteristically 1 In 1:1 f. 65 Through their climax in C hrist's prayer for uni ty "that they may all be one" Gn 17). '" In 15:4-16. 67 The Lord's description of Himself as the true vine in w hich the diSciples are called to remain, comes precisely at the moment w hen He appeals to them, "Abide in me" Gn 15:1-5), cannot be seen as unrelated to the idea of Israel as the "vine" (see a bove). For John, the Church, as comprising those w ho are "of the truth," is the true Israel (d. e.H . Dodd, The Interpretalian of the Fa urlh Gospel, 1953, p. 246) w ith w hich the "Son of Man" is identified . This is indicated, for example, by the way John transfers the passage from Gen. 28:12 into his Gospel Gn 1:51) by replacing the word "Jacob" with the phrase "the Son of Man" (d. e.H. Dodd, ibid.) 68 See S. Agouridis, "Time and Eternity," lac. cit. , 1lI, 1958, p. 114 and 150. In The fact that the Pauline Churches had different ways of expressing their consciousness regarding the Divine Eucharist from those familiar to the Johannine Churches is indicated also by the different terminology they used to d eSignate the Eucharist. Thus, for the Pauline Churches, the favored term is the "bod y," whereas, for the Joha nnine Church es, it is the "flesh" of Jesus Christ; perhaps on acco unt of John's battle aga inst Docetism, as was the case with Ignatius. See G.H .e. MacGregor, " The Eucharist in the Fourth Gospel," in New Testament Studies 9 (1963), 117. For both of these terms see J. Jeremias, Die Abendmahlswarle Jesu, 1949', p. 103 f. In the end the Pauline term "body of Christ" to denote the Eucharist prevailed in the Church as is shown by the ancient phrase "The Body of Christ" which accompanied the giving of Holy Communion, and to which the communica nt answered "Amen" (see Hippolytus, Apast. Trad. , ed . Dix, p . 41; Aposl. Consl. VllI:13:15; and Eusebius, fccl. Hist. VI:43:19). 7U For a detailed analysis of these images see P. Minea r, Images of the Church in the New Testament, 1960. Cf. also E. Mersch, Le corps
75
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EUCHARIST, BISHOP, CHURCH
77
•
Kirche, p. 170 f. But w hether the word is given an active meaning
mystique du Christ, I, p. 143 f. "S ' "??MA'" . d ern ee 'mter aI'/Os E . S C h W€ltzer, .. In TWNT . . . .; elUS "Die Kirche als Leib Christi in den Paulinischen Antilegomena," in Theolog. Literaturzeitung, (1961) 241-256.; D. Michel, Das Zeugnis des N.T. von der Gemeinde, 1941, p. 44 f.; J.AT Robinson, The Body, 1952; E. Best, One Body in Christ, 1955; R.P. Shedd, Man in Community, 1958, p. 161 f. ; R. Bultmann, "The Transformation of the Idea olthe Church ... ," in Canadian Journal af Theology, 1 (1955) 73-81; K. Barth, Kirchliche Dagmatik, IV / 1,1963, p. 741.; P. Minear, op. cit.; J. Schneider, Die Einheit der Kirche nach N.T., 1936, p. 60 f. For RC views see inter alios T. 50iron, Die Kirche als der Leib Christi nach der Lehre des hi. Paulus, 1951, p. 9-32; H. Dieckmann Die Verfassung der I
Urkirche, dargestellt auf Grund de r Paulusbriefe und der Apostelgeschichte, 1923, p. 107 f.; F. Mussner, Christus, das All und die Kirche, 1955; L. Cerfaux, La Theologie ... , p. 150f£; and J. Hamer, L' E.glise est une communion, 1962, p. 50 f. For an Orthodox view in very general terms, see V. Ioannidis, "The Unity," lac. cit. p. 178 f. n Cf. c.T. C raig, The One Church in the Light of the N.T., 1951, p. 21: "The identification of the Church with the Body of Christ cannot be understood apart from the Eucharistic word 'This is my bod y'." Cf. H. Schlier, Die Zeit der Kirche. Exegetische Aufsatze und Vortrage, 1962 3, p. 246 f. and R. Schnackenburg, op. cit., p. 158 f. 73 For details, see A.D.J. Rawlinson, "Corpus Christ," in Mysterium Christi (ed. G.A. Bell and A. Deissmann), 1930, p . 225 f. " See L. Strack - P. Billerbeck, Komlnentar, III, p. 446 f. 73 See e.g. R. Bultmann, "Th e Transformation ... ," ibid ., pp. 73-81. 76 See e.g. V. Ioannidis, "The Unity," loco cit. p. 179, where the source of the term is regarded as being the story told by the Roman Menenius Agrippa who was trying to emphasize to the rebellious Roman plebeians that the citizens of a state are like the m embers of a body. 77 This is in response primarily to the view set out in the preceding note. " 1 Cor. 3:9; 14:5,12; 2 Cor. 12:19; Eph. 2:21, 4:12, 4:16. 7'! 1 Tim. 3:15; Heb. 3:6; 1 Pet. 2:5. 80 The notion of "building" (oikodomi!) here is n ot static. The Church is "being built up," i.e. she "increases." Cf. 1 Cor. 14:4; 1 Thes. 5: 11 ; 1 Pet. 2:5 in combination with 1 Cor. 3:6-7; Eph. 2:21, 4:15-16; Col. 1:10,2:19; 1 Pet. 2:2. " 2 Cor. 11:2 and Eph. 4:13. 82 The interpretation of the term pleroma presents difficulties for w hich see E Mussner, op. cit. p. 46 f. Cf. also H. Schlier, Die Zeit der
(= the Church as complem ent of Christ), as favored by ancient exegetes including St John Chrysostom, or a passive meaning (= the
Church is fulfilled through Christ), as favored by modern commentators, it still makes no sense without the idea of an ontological interdependency between Christ and the Church. 83 Eph. 4:13. Cf. 1:23. 84 This is clear at least in Hebrews 12:22-24 and 13:10, where the allusion is certainly to the Eucharist as shown by the verb "to eat." Cf. D. Stone, A History of the Doctrine of the Holy Eucharist, 1,1959, p. 15, and perhaps also the relevant passages of 1 Peter. "' 1 Cor. 6:15, 12:12, 12:27; Eph. 4:25, 5:30 etc. 86 Eph. 5:29 f. Cf. also the whole of Paul's argumen t in 1 Cor. 6:15 f. 87 Unity per se was not a characteristic exclusive to the Church. In the Roman Empire, the formation of "associations" was such a widespread practice that there were special laws governing the affairs of the various organizations w hich were known by the term collegia (see Tacitus, Annals 14.17; Pliny, Ad Traj. 34.97; Minucius Felix, Octavius 8-9 and Origen, Against Celsus 1.1. C f. J.P. Waltzing, Etude Historique sur les Corporations Professionels des Romains, I, pp. '11 3-129 and Th. Mommsen, Le droit penal romain, II, pp. 274-8). The love and mutual support which prevailed among the members of these collegia was extraordinary and was organized through a common fund to which each would contribute m onthly (stips menstrua); thus, the members would address each other as "brethren" (fratres , sodales, socii). Cf. EX. Kraus, "Fratemitas," in Realencyclopaedie der christl. Altertumer, I, 1880, p. 540). Apart from the pagans, the Jews who lived w ithin the Roman Empire came together in special communities under their own ethnarch (d. E. Schurer, Geschichte des judischen Volkes, 1914, pp. 14,17). The brotherly love between them was strong, and was manifest especially in groups such as the Essenes whose life was organized on principles of comm on property (d. L. Philippidis, History, p. 480 f.) To characterize the Church's tmity as simply a "communion of love," therefore, does not satisfy the historian who sees the Church as a sui generis unity. 88 E.g. E. Hatch, The Organization of the Early Christian Churches, 1888, p. 26 f. and L. Duchesne, Histoire Ancienne de l'Eglise, I, 1906, pp 381-87. 89 The connection of the Eucharist with the essence of the Church (see above, In troduction) should be especially stressed because it is precisely on this point that R. Sohm goes astray in his attempt to
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connect the origin of Canon Law with the Eucharist., . 90 On this see H . Chira t, L' Assemblee Ch,,!tienne Ii r Age Apostohque (ser. Lex O ra nd i No. 10), 1949, passim and esp . p . 188 f. 91 This is clear in the book of the Apocalypse (see above p . 51); but also in Hebrew s, where w orship dominates, the "altar" of the Eucharist (see above p. 64, n . 83) is linked w ith "Mou n t Z ion and the city of the living God , the heavenly Jerusalem, and to innumerable an gels, and to the festal gathering and assembly of the firstborn who are enrolled in heaven, and to a judge who is God of all ... " (1 2:22 f.). 92 Heb. 12:2, CoL 3:1, Eph . 1:2 a nd esp . Phil. 2:6-11 , w here we m ost likely h ave a hym n used in the worship of the primitive Church (ct. above, p. 56). L Karavidopoulos, The Christological Hymn in Phi/' 2:6-11 (in G reek), 1963. OJ Eph. 4:5. 94 Rev. 1:5. 95 Heb . 8:2. % Heb. 5:6; 8:4; 10:21; 2:17. '" ljeb. 3:l. 98 Rom. 15:8; Lk 22:77; ct. PhiL 2:7; M t 12:18; Acts 3:13, 4:27. 99 1 Pet. 2:25; 5:4; Heb. 13:20. 100 Mt 23:8; Jn 13:13. 101 CoL 1 :18. 102 See above, p . 53 f., on the relation of the O ne to th e "Ma ny" united in Him. 103 Ct. the phrase in the Liturgy of St Joh n Chrysostom , "Who a rt enthroned on hig h w ith the Father, and invisibly present here with u s." 104 This is es!,ecially evident in the Apocalyp se and in H ebrews, and also in Ignatius on w hom see be low. 10; G. Konidaris, On the Supposed Difference, p. 34 I. 1116 Cf. EM. Braun, Neues Licht auf die Kirche, p. 179. 107 As is the opinion of e.g. 8.0. Beicke, Glaube und Leben der Urgemeinde, 1957, p. 25 I. 1118 Between the Apostle (lit. "sent one") and Christ the sender there exists a m ystical relation ship . Christ Himself is working in and throu gh the Apostle: "H e wh o hears you h ears m e, and he wh o rejects you rejects m e" (Lk 10: 16. Ct. 1 Thes. 4:8). 11\9 See p. 65ft. 110 Cf. K. Moura tid is, Diversification, Secularization and Recent Developments in the Law of the Roman Catholic Church (in Greek), 1961, p . 36: "The divine factor d ominates d uring this period (i.e.
• •
/
•
the initial period ) in the organiza tion of the Church .... " \H Heb. 3:14. Thus, from the viewpoint of p articipa tion in the body of Christ, the C hurch, there is comp lete equality of her m embers irrespective of w hat order they belon g to. This is expressed par excellence in the Divine Eucharist in which from the beginning all orders of the Church had to participate. Ct. G . Dix, The Shape of the Liturgy p . 195 f. and L Kotsonis, The Plnce of the LaihJ in Church Organization (in Greek), 1956, p . 32 I. 112 "Are all Apostles?," asks Paul (1 Cor. 12:29) . 113 'They shall a ll be taught by God ," ind eed (jn 6:45); bu t not all are teach ers (1 Cor. 12:29 a nd jas 3:1) . 114 Acts 6:1-6. 115 The sam e should be said of Christ's priesthood . He is the Priest (see n . 96 a bove) just as H e is the Apostle or the Teach er; and the m embers of His Church, as constituting His body which is offered by the priests in the Eucharist, form a "priesthood " (it should be n oted that both 1 Pet. 2:5-9 and Rev. 5:10, w here a royal priesthood is m entioned, occur within Eucharistic texts). But as not all partake of His a postolic or other properties, so not all are able to partake of His priestly prop erty. A general priesthood would ha ve been as comprehensi ble to primitive Christianity as a general apostali'ci ty or d iaconate etc. 110 Ct. j. Coison, op. cit. p .49 f.: " If all the faithful are m embers of the sam e Bod y in Jesu s Christ, not all of these m emb ers are identical and n ot all h ave the sa m e fun cti on . The g ra ce of God is multiform, a nd the gifts of the Spirit variou s." 117 It is by no m eans accidental that althou gh the Church separated from the Eucharist many sacraments w hich were once connected with it she never did this with the ordina tion of priests. 118 1 Cor. 14:40. 119 This distinction was introduced by Harnack, Die Lehre der zwolf AposteL (Texte und Untersuchun gen, II, 1884, p p. 145-149), perhaps u nder the influence of E. Hatch's work I7le Organization of the Early Chu rch ... , as O. Linton thinks, op . cit. p . 36 f. (ct. also E. Foerster, R. Sohms Kritik des Kirchen rechtes, 1942, p . 51 f.). It was subsequently establish ed in historiograph y by Lie tz mann a nd Heussi through their church histories. 120 See e.g. J. Klein, Grundlegung und Grellzen des Knnonisches Rechtes, 1947, p. 10 f. III See 1 Tim. 3:2, 5:17; 2 Tim. 2:2; Tit. 1:9; Heb. 13:7; Jas. 5:14 etc. m O n the subject of ordina tion as the laying on of hands to con vey a particular blessing see j. Behm, Die Handauflegung in
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Urchristentu," nach Venvendung, Herkunft und Bedeutung, 1911 ; j . Coppens, L'lmposition des Mains et les Rites Connexes dans Ie N.T., 1925; M. Kaiser, Die Einheit der Kirchengewalt nach den Zeugnis des N.T. und der Apostolischen Vater, 1956, p . 104 f. Cf. also M . Siotis,
ministrative functions superior to the bishops). 127 Many of the Protestant historians base their views on the polity of th e primitive Church exclu sively on such arg uments from s ilen ce. So fo r exa mpl e, E. Schwe i zer, Gemeinde und Gemeindenordnung illl Neuen Testament, 1959, Sb; Sm and e lsewhere 12S Clearly all participated through hymns, speaking in tongues etc. 129 1 Cor. 14:16. 130 1 Clem ent 40:3-41:4 "For his own proper services are assigned to the high priest, and their own proper place is prescibed to the priests, an d their own proper ministrations devolve on the Levites. The laym an is bo und by the la ws that pertain to laymen. Let every one of you, brethren, be well-pleasing to God in his own order, living in a ll good conscience, not going beyond the rule o f th e ministry prescribed to him ... " 131 justin, 1 Apol. 6S. Cf. P. Rouget, Amen. Acclamation dll peuple
"Die klassische Wld die christliche Cheirotonie in ihrem Verhii ltnis/' in Theologia 20 (1 949), 21 (1950) and 22 (1951 ). Esp ecially fo r insta l-
lation in a specific minis try, ordination was commonplace in apostolic times. So, for example, in Acts 13:1-3 (d espite the d oubts of j. Brosch, Charismen und Amter in der Urkirche, 1951 , p. 163 a nd M. Kaiser, o p. cit. p . 38), A cts 6:6 and 14:23 (Cf M. Kaiser, o p . cit. p. 94). Likewise in 1 Tim. 4:14 and 2 Tim . 1:6. The term "appoint" (Ti. 1:5) must also include or presuppose an act of ordination even though it has a special meaning (see. G. Konida ris, On the Supposed Difference, p. 31. 123 Cf. H . Schlie r, in Glaube und Geschichte, Festschrift fUr F. Gogarten, 1948, p. 44 f. and G. Ko nidaris, op. cit. p. 31 '" See 1 Cor. 14:16 and 23 f. in combination with 14:40. 125 Thus in Romans 12:6 deacons are placed before teachers, and in Ephesians 4:11, pastors corne before teachers, etc. Besides, the
view that the charismatics formed a special order and organization in th e primitive Church ca nnot be support ed from 1 Corinthians 12:28 on w hich Harnack and subsequent historiography tried to base it. A simple comparison of the list of charisma tics
contained in this passage with the similar list in Romans 12:6-9 and the expla nations Paul gives in 1 Corin thians 14:6 is sufficient to d emonstrate that in 1 Corinthians 12:28, Paul is not in any way referrin g to the ad ministration of the Church in Corinth. Nothing could justify Harnack's supposition that the "prophets" a nd "teachers" in 1 Corinthians 12:28 constitute special "orders" of ministers in the local Church more than the obviously groundless supposition that "he who contributes in liberality" and "he who d oes acts of mercy with cheerfulness," who are numbered w ith the prophets and teachers in Romans 12:6-9, also formed specia l "ord ers" in the Church ! 126 The separation of administration from the charism of priesthood in su ch a way that a distin ction is created b e tw een "administrative" and "spiritual" spheres of competence is a produ ct of Western sch olastic theology. This separation was accepted and enshrined by the Roman Catholic C hurch which can, thus, entrust higher administrative responsibilities to church me mbers of lower clerical rank (cardinals, for instance, may be deacons or even laymen, w ithout this preventing them from carrying out ad-
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sacerdotal, 1947. In this case, this is not an arbitrary procedure from the viewpoint of historical method if on~ takes into account that the Roman Church was distinguished for its strict conservatism in the early centuries. Thus, o n the basis of 1 Clementwhich forms a link between th e Corinth we know from St Paul and the Rome known to Justin, we are justified in believing that the situa tion, rega rd ing the Eucharistic assembly, did not change substantially during the period of time covered by these tex ts 133 G. Konidaris, On the Supposed Difference, p. 70 (note): "The presidents! presbyters! bishops w ho took the place of the Apostles probably did not dare to emphasize the sa m e name m ore strongly. They lived under the shadow of the n ame of the Apostles an d of their authority." 134 See Acts 20:7-12, where Paul presides at the assembly the purpose of w hich was to "break bread ." 135 Didache 10:7: "A llow the prophe ts to give thanks as long as they wish ." It is probable that Acts 13:2, "W hile they [i.e. the pro phets a nd teachers] were worshipping [/eitourgollnton} the Lord," a lso implies a liturgical function for these charismatics, as J. Colson thinks, op. cit. p . 31. 136 Acts 21:18. 137 This conclusion may be d educed from the fact that the presbyters alread y appea r with the Apostles a t the Apostolic Council (Acts 1S:2, 4, 6, 22, "Apostles a nd presbyters." The o rigin of the presb yters is a n obscure historical proble m . On this see the theo132
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ries of G. Dix, "Ministry in the Early Church," in The Apostolic Ministnj (ed. Kirk), 1946, p .233 f.; A.M. Farrer, ibid. p. 143 f.; Bornkamm, in T. W.N.T., VI, p. 655 f. and W. Michaelis, Das Altestenamt, 1953, pp. 35-39. The most probable view seems to be that of G. Dix, according to w hich presbyters go back to the Jewish tradition. ' 38 Acts 6:211; Phil. 1:1 and 1 Tim. 3:1. Their origin, in contrast to the presbyters and contrary to the view of G. Dix ("Ministry," p. 232 f.) shou ld be sought in the Churches of Gentile origin, according to von Campenhausen, Kirchliches Amt und geist/iche Vol/lllacht, 1953, p. 84. 139 On th e close connection of the deacons with the Eucharist, see G. Dix, op. cit. p. 245 f. It is noteworthy that a similar close relation existed between deacons and bishops probably d eriving from the original position of the former as assistants to the Apostles (see Acts 19:22, 13:5; Rom. 16:21; 2 Cor. 8:23 and Phil. 2:25), and the capacity of the latter as successors to the Apostles particularly in the Divine Eucharist. See below. '40 G. Konidaris, op . cit. p . 26. 14' ibid. p. 42 f. 14' In his work On the Supposed Difference, etc. ,,, M. Kaiser (op. cit. p. 174) is righ t in stressing that the absence of the Bishop from the NT is connected with the presence and prestige of the Apostles there. We should make clear, however, that this absence relates only to the title of bishop and not to the institution per se (d . G. Konidaris, op. cit. p. 13). The presence of the Apostles meant that the Bishop became invisible in the sources, but not in practice. 144 Cf. G. Konidaris, On the Regional and Chronological Limits to the use of the term "Bishops and Deacons," 1960. 145 I Clem. 44:1-3. 146 Elsewhere he speaks of Enoch and Noa h as "ministering" (9:2-4); and similarly of the an gels (34:5) and of the O.T. prophets as ministers of God's grace (8:1 ). ' 47 I Clem . 44:4. '48 Cf. G. Kon idaris, "Apostolic Succession " (in Greek), in Threskevtiki kai Ethiki Enkyklopaedia, IV, 1964, col. 111 6. 149 "Apostolic Succession: A. The original conception. B. The problem of non-catholic orders," in Essays on the Early History of the Church and the Ministry, H .B. Swete (ed.), 1918, p p. 93-214. 'so See A. Ehrhardt, The Apostolic Succession in the First Two Centuries of the Church, 1953 and F Dvom ik, The Idea of Apostolicity in Byzantium and the Legend of Saint Andrew, 1958, p. 39 f.
Didache 10:7. m This transfer of powers is attested by 1 Clement and the Didache. 15' Ignatius, Magn. 6: 1. '54 Rev. 4-5. In linking the Apocalypse wi th the Divine Eucha-
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rist here, we are not m aking arbitary use of an apocalyptic text as an historica l Source. The Apocalypse was no t w ritte n w ithout relation to the Church life of its d ay and particula rly the Divine Eucharist. There is a w idespread tendency in modern scholarship to regard even the hymns of the Apocalypse (Rev. 4:11, 5:9-14 and 17 f.) as hymns fro m the Divine Eucharist. See e.g. F.J. Doelger, Sol
Sa lutis. Gebel und Gesang im Christ/ichen Altertum. Rucksicht auf die Ostung im Gebel und Liturgie, 1925, p . 127 and C. Ruch, "La Messe , d'apr"s la sainte Ecriture," in D.T. C., X, 858. 15; Cf. W. Telfer, The Office of a Bishop, 1962, p. 93. 15. For the term "presbyter" in the Apocalypse as meaning not angels but men, see P. Bratsiotis, The Apocalypse (in Greek), p . 11 9 f. an d esp. p. 122. The fact that the reference here is not to human beings in general or the faithful in their entirety, but to a particular order, is shown by the clear distinction made between the "presbyters" and the "saints" (= all members of the Church regardless of o rd er) in Rev. 5:8. There is thus no reason to reject the interpreta-
tion accordi ng to w hich this passage has to d o w ith the institution of presby ters and in particular their place in the Eucharistic assembly, espeCially given that, as Professor P. Bratsio tis observes (ibid. p. 122), "this heavenly liturgy [in the Apocalypse] is a type of th e ea rthly liturgy according to the O rthodox understanding." Ignatius" phrase "the Bishop with the presby terium" (Smyrn. 8:1 and Eph. 20:2) most likely also takes its origin from the celebration of the Divine Eucharist which Ignatius had in mind . This hypothesis is supported by the fact that this phrase appears immediately after a reference to the Eucharist and as part of Ignatius' mo re gen-
eral effort to u nd erline its unity. 157 This arrangement of the Eucharist is likewise presupposed by tex ts such as Justin's First Apology, 65 and 67; H ip polytus, Apost. Trad. (Dix, 6 and 40f.) etc. '58 The Johannine understanding of the Divine Eucharist was precisely theocentric: "My Father gives you the tru e bread from heaven" Un 6:32). The Bishop who occupied the throne in the Altar was therefore seen as the living icon of God or of Christ (Ignatius, Tral. 3:1 and Magn. 3:1). Anyone w ho does not obey the "visible" bishop "seeks to mock the one w ho is invisible," i.e. God (Magn.
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3:2). Cf. likewise the connection between the "unity of God" and "unity in the episeope" which Ignati us makes in Polye. 8:3. The conception that the Bishop is an "icon of Christ" was long preserved (see Ps-Clement, Hom. 3:62 - Syria, fourth century). 159 See above, lntroduction. "'" Ignatius, Magn . 6: "Be united with the Bishop." It is worthy of particular note that Ignatius "does not hesitate to characterize union with Christ as union with the Bishop" (K. Bonis, "St Ignatius the Godbearer and His Views on the Church" (in Greek), in Orthodoxos Skepsis 1 (1958),39.
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PART
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FORMATION
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Unity in the Divine Eucharist and the Bishop, and the Formation of the "Catholic Church"
Chapter One
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ONE EUCHARIST - O NE BISHOP IN EACH CHURCH •
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The identification of the eucharistic assembly with the Church of God herself had as a direct consequence the preservation of one Eucharist in each Church under the leadership of the presiding Bishop. This appears clearly for the first time in the epistles of Ignatius who writes, "Take heed, then, to have but one Eucharist. For there is one flesh of our Lord Jesus Christ, and one cup for union with His Blood; one altar, as there is also one Bishop with the presbyterium and the deacons."1 From this passage it is quite clearthat for St Ignatius, who, as we have seen, linked the Bishop inseparably with the Eucharist and the unity of the Church,' unity in the OiI s ine Eucharist and in the Bishop presupposed one eucharistic "assembly, one altar and one Bishop in each Church. This raises the question: was there actually only one Eucharist, "under the leadership of the Bishop,"J in each Church; or does this passage quoted represent merely a desire and exhortation on Ignatius' part? This question is fundamental from an historical viewpoint, and has important implications for ecclesiology which will be discussed in the following chapter. Many scholars studying the passage of St Ignatius quoted above have maintained the view that at the time Ignatius was writing his epistles there were many eucharistic assemblies in each Church because otherwise - according to them - he would not have written in those terms. This argument cannot be taken seriously because it is possible that Ignatius had simply discerned tendencies towards the creation of
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parallel eucharistic assemblies without this meaning necessarily that the gathering of all the faithful of each Church into one Eucharist under the Bishop was not the regular state of affairs prevailing at the time. That such divisive tendencies did exist in the Churches to which Ignatius was writing is clear from his repeated admonitions to the Christians not to follow heretics and schismatics. Despite this, Ignatius repeatedly stresses that what he writes about schism is precautionary in character: "I say these things, my beloved, not because I know any of you to be so disposed; but, being as I am less than all of you, I want to protect you in advance.'" That his admonition to maintain one Eucharist under one Bishop and at one altar must have the same sense, is shown by the affirmation that comes immediately before it: "Not that I have found any division among you, but disintegration (apodiy/ismos5)."6 It is clear, then, that for Ignatius himself the admonition to maintain one Eucharist does not necessarily presuppose an existing state of affairs to the contrary. But if Ignatius' exhortation to maintain one Eucharist in each Church is seen as reflecting a corresponding historical reality, this gives rise to two questions which are fundamental for the history of the Church's unity in the Divine Eucharist and in the Bishop. Firstly: if it is true, as we have seen, that the "Church in the household" of apostolic times signified the assembly to celebrate the Eucharist, were there not more than one of these "household Churches" in each city, and therefore more than one eucharistic assembly? Secondly: what would happen with the Christians out in the countryside if the only eucharistic assembly in each Church was initially that "under the leadership of the Bishop," as Ignatius would have it? It is not easy to give an answer to these two questions because the sources are not only incomplete, but also indifferent to our historical curiosity. In consequence, the examination of the few sources we do have will require minute and penetrating observation.
Part Two - Formation
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1. The one Eucharist under the leadership of the Bishop and the "Church in the household" The prevailing view is that the "Church in the household" (kat' oikon ekklesia) was a sort of semi-official gathering in various houses within the local Church. This view is prevalent not only among those who identify the Church in the household with prominent Christian families,' but also among those who accept it as an assembly to celebrate the Eucharist.' If this view is accepted, it then follows that the "Church in the household" did not bring together the whole of the local Church, but formed a sort of smaller ecclesial unit within it, more than one of which could exist in each city. This view automatically comes into conflict with the fact that, as we have seen, Paul knows of only one Church in each city. So either the "Church in the household" is a "church," in which case there should not be more than one of them in a city; or else it is not a full "church," in which case the existence of more than one in the same city would be justified. It is, therefore, of cardinaUmportance for the present study to examine whether the prevailing view outlined above has any basis in the sources. Of all the passages containing the term "Church in the household," Rom. 16:4 appears to be the only one capable of throwing light on our problem. If we take a look at the section of the text in which the term appears, we shall see that the "Church in the household" of Priscilla and Aquila is not the only group Paul refers to. "Greetings" are sent not only to individuals, such as Epaenetus, Mary etc., but also to groups and families in Rome. Thus, we find "those who belong to the family of Aristobulus" (v. 10), "those in the Lord who belong to the family of Narcissus (v.11), "Rufus, eminent in the Lord, and his mother" (v. 13), "Asyncretus, Phlegon, Hermas, Patrobus, Hermes and the brethren who are with them" (v. 14), and "Philologus and Julia, Nere,!s and his sister, and Olympas, and all the saints who are with them" (v. 15). These groups clearly show that at that time within the local Church certain Christians stood out who, it seems, had corne to know Christianity and had perhaps
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spread it not as individuals, but as groups (d. the baptism of whole "households," i.e. families, su ch as that of Stephanas in Corinth, etc.). But it is noteworthy and interesting that although a great number of su ch groups are referred to in Romans 16, only one of them, that of Priscilla and Aquila, is called by the name of "Church in the household." All the other groups are either not d escribed at all, or else they are called "brethren" or "saints" - names common to all Christians. This highly significant detail, which has gone unnoticed by those who hold that there existed ma ny "Churches in the household" within the local Church, forces us to ask: Why does Paul use the term "Church in the household" for only one of these groups? The answer cannot be that it is pure chance because the number of groups among which the "Church in the household" appears in the text under discu ssion is such that it would be natural to expect another instance of "Church in the household." Nowhere in the sources, however, do we find more than' one "household Church" in each city. In Rome, we have the "Church in the household" of Priscilla and Aquila singled out amidst many other groups and families, n one of which is described as a "church.'" In Colossae, we have that of Philemon during the period of Paul's imprisonment in Rome (Philem. 2); in Laodicea that of Nymphas (Col. 4:15); in Corinth that of Priscilla and Aquila while they were living there (1 Cor. 16:19)." In which of the sources do we find support for the prevailing view that there were many "Churches in the household" in each city? But there are also more explicit pieces of evidence against the prevailing view. In Rom. 16:23, we read about a certain Gaius who is called "host to m e [Paull and to the whole church." This is undoubtedly a reference to the "Church in the household" " in Corinth from where Paul is writing to the Romans. As this passage informs u s, Gaius used to offer his house to Paul whenever the latter was in Corinth, and also to the whole Church of Corinth for her eucharistic assemblies, which, in keeping with the spirit of 1 Corinthians,12 expressed the very Church of God . If, then, as is usually believed, the "Church in the household" signified a semi-official assembly of Chris-
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tians, and if there were many such "churches" in each city, how are we to understand the fact here that Gaius is called host to the whole Church? The phrase "the whole Church" is used by Paul also in 1 Cor. 14:23: "if therefore the whole church comes together in the same place." That this passage too refers to the eucharistic assembly identified with the "whole Church" is shown by the verb "com e together" (synelthe), and by the fact that the eu charistic gathering or "church" in Corinth of 1 Corinthians 11 continues to be im. plied here B It follows that the eu charistic gathering, which at the time of the Epistle to the Romans was hosted in Gaius' house in Corinth, included "the whole church," i.e. all the Christians in Corinth. Therefore, the "Church in the household" of Gaius was not a "semi-official" church or one of the many in Corinth, but the full and catholic" Church of Corinth. Only when one "household Church" has ceased to exist should we look for another within the same local Church. As long as a "church in a household" existed, it constituted the whole Church of God in that city. !S . These conclusions follow from the passages which refer clearly to the "Church in the household." The same conclusions can also be drawn from an examination of the passages which refer to the Church in the household without u sing that tellll. Thus, in Acts 2:46, we read that the Eucharist was celebrated "in the house" or "at home" (kat' oikon).!' Despite the difficulties this passage presents to commentators, one detail should be underlined: the term "house" is used in the singular. We are unable to comprehend how it is possible to interpret this passage as m eaning "breaking bread from house to house" or "in their houses."!7 This not only makes the text, incomprehensible - how is it possible for the Eucharist to move from house to house!' or to be celebrated by each family at home? - but it also goes against the sense of the text which m ay be paraphrased roughly as follows: The prayer of the first Christians was performed in the Jewish temple, but not the breaking of bread; this took place in the house and not in the temple. If the phrase kat' oikon is kept strictly within its context, then the m eaning of the passage •
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becomes clear. The fact that the breaking of bread took place kilt' oikon (singular) and not kilt' oikolls (plural) implies that the Eucharist was not celebrated at several houses simultaneously but only in one. This conclusion becomes more certain if it is taken into account that the author of Acts is not unaware of the plural form kilt' oikollS, as can be seen from Acts 8:3 ' 9 and 20:20,20 but he never uses it in connection with the Eucharist. The question inevitably arises: why could other ecclesial activities, such as preaching, be performed "from house to house," whereas the Eucharist was celebrated "in the house"? The answer would perhaps be difficult were it not for the fact that all the texts we have looked at point in the same direction: to the existence of only one Eucharist in each city. Thus the "Church in the household" did not fragment the Church, but expressed in a quite real way the unity of each Church in one Eucharist. If the "Church in the household" as a term appears exclusively in the Epistles of Paul, its content, as the "whole Church" united in one Eucharist in each city, should not be restricted either to the Pauline Churches or to apostolic times. It is, of course, a fact that the Epistles of Paul form our only source, but we are able to recognize a broader character in the information the Apostle gives owing to the fact that it seems he was aware of the prevailing situation in all the Churches as regards the Eucharist. This at least is the indication of his express conviction that he knows the traditions and "practices" of all the Churches," to which, besides, he extends his care. 22 Besides, the Church of Jerusalem - the most powerful in terms of its influence on the other Churches around the world 23 - does not seem to have differed from the Pauline Churches in respect of the "Church in the household," as is shown by the passages of Acts examined above. In the post-apostolic era the "Church in the household" no longer existed as a term," but it continued to exist in practice up till the time when the Christians acquired special church buildings of their own for the celebration of the Eucharist. 25 The existence of the one Eucharist equally continued
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beyond the apostolic period as an expression of the oneness of the local Church, and despite the increase in the number of Christians, The earliest text of the post-apostolic era, 1 Clement, hints at the existence of one Eucharist26 while St Ignatius insists that the faithful of Philadelphia should come together into "one Eucharist."" But a clear and noteworthy testimony to the preservation of the single Eucharist right up to the middle of the second century, or at a time when the number of Christians must have increased significantly, especially in Rome, is given by Justin. When in 163/ 5 Justin was facing a martyr's death, he tried to evade the prefect's questions. But, when asked again insistently, he replied that he knew only one place in Rome where the Christians gathered and that was the house of a certain Martinus by the TImiotinian Baths." This information does not of course tell us whether the gathering Justin refers to is for the Eucharist. But if this is assumed, then this information becomes highly significant. Apart from this vague piece of infoIInation, however, Justin gives us another quite clear indication, strictly historical in character, of the fact that in Rome around the middle of the second century the Christians (and this is still more significant) not only of Rome but also of the surrounding villages would come together for one sale Eucharist: "and on the day called Sunday, there is a gathering in the same place of all those living in cities or countnj areas."" If this was what happened, then, in the large and diverse'" Church of Rome, we can imagine not only how much more naturally it would have happened in the other Churches, but, above all, how important the Church must have considered it to preserve the integrity of the Eucharist in each city, The conservatism of the Roman Church, known also from other areas," preserved the primitive ecclesiology unadulterated, at least up to the middle of the second century: where there is one Church, there is one Eucharist under the leadership of one Bishop, who presides over both," Let us see now how this principle was preserved when Christianity spread outside the cities into the country areas,
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2. The one Eucharist under the leadership of the Bishop and the Christians in the countryside. Chris tianity made its appearance as a religion of the cities.33 We find the firs t evidence for the spread of Christianity into the countryside around the beginning of the second century or end of the first.'" Already around the middle of the second century, Justin tells us that there were Christians in the villages around Rome." As regards civil organization, these Christians came under the rural prefectures know in the Roman empire as pagi (country areas) or vici (villages) as opposed to the cities (civitas, urbs, oppidum) which alone enjoyed full self-government as respublicae. 36 But while for the pagans these "country areas" and "villages" formed independent religious communities united around the worship of the gods and often having their own genius pagi or local deity,37 the Christians of the country areas were from the beginning attached to the worship performed in the city. This is of great importance for history, and shows that it was wrong to ~k the model for the rural parish and its origin in the political division of the Roman state." The organization of the Church appears to have d eveloped in a m anner of its own, dictated by the fundamental ecclesiological principles which we have seen. Appearing from the beginning as one eucharistic assembly under the leadership of one Bishop, the Church developed her organization in a manner consistent with this original form of h ers which, as we have seen, was inextricably bound up with serious theological presuppositions. Thus, as far as the sources allow u s to discover, at least until the middle of th e second century (composition of Justin's First Apolof51J), the Christians of the villages formed one ecclesial unity with the Christians of the city near which they lived. This was true at least for Rome where Justin was writing without however excluding the Churches of the East whose life was not unknown to this writer and which he seems to have included in his description of the eu charistic assemblies." In consequence, any investigation into the d etachment of the village Christians from the city to form their own eu charistic assembly has to begin after the middle of
the second century.'" This coincides w ith the rapid spread of Christianity and increase in the number of Christians. Around the middle of the second century, the West saw the establishment of many new Churches. It was no longer easy to serve the rural areas through the religious assembly in the city, and for this reason the setting up of a special church community (paroikia) in the country became a necessity. How was this done, and what consequences did it have for the unity of the Church? At this point in the question, an institution comes into the picture w hich is basic to the early Church, and the significance of w hich has not been adequately studied: that of the chorepiscopIls. Examination of this institution reveals both the time at w hich the villages started to be formed into special ecclesial unities, and the way in which the early Church preserved her original understanding of unity. As to the time when chorepiscopi appeared, and therefore, when the villages became detached from the ecclesial unity of the city, scholars have put forward different views. In a valuable study, 41 F. Gillmann considers that the beginnings of the institution should be sou ght actually in the first century because even then Christianity had begun to spread into the countryside. But apart from the fact that we do not get our first clear evidence for Christianity in the countryside before the beginning of the second century," Gillmann's view seems incorrect also because it presupposes that the chorepiscopi appeared automatically with the Christians of the villages which cannot be reconciled with the fact that initially the Christians from the villages congregated around the Bishop of the city." But if the first or even early second centuries provide no evidence of chorepiscopi, then, immediately after the middle of the second century, the institution appears clearly, especially in the West." Thus in the reign of Antoninus (138-161), a country area in Italy (a place called vicIls Baccanensis, in Tuscany) had a Bishop called Alexander." A little later, around the end of the second century, evidence from the Acta Caeciliae (the historical core of which there is no reason to doubt) refers to a certain Bishop w ith the phrase urbanIls papa which is ac-
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cepted" as meaning Triopius, Bishop of the pagus Appiae in Italy. Thus in the second half of the second century, we have two specific examples of Bishops of a pagus or a vicus in Italy, in other words chorepiscopi, even though they are not known by that title. After this, chorepiscopi in Italy appear in increased numbers. There is a reference to Novatian being ordained in Rome in 249 by Bishops of "villages,"" in other words by chorepiscopi. Similarly, at the same period, we hear of the convocation of a synod of the Bishops in Africa who numbered 71 , a number far exceeding the number of cities then existing in that area. In the East, we learn of chorepiscopi for the first time from Eusebius. Recounting the events concerning Paul of Samosata, Bishop of Antioch (267-70), he quotes a letter from the Council of Antioch which deposed him in which we read about Bishops "of the adjacent country areas and cities" who surrounded Paul and supported him." Although, of course, this information goes back only to the middle of the third century, this institution had certainly existed for a long time in the East" as evidenced by the fact that the fourth century saw not its beginning, but its end." What exactly were the chorepiscopi? Did they have full episcopal jurisdiction, or were they rather presbyters? Both hypotheses have been put forward. 5! Unfortunately, our earliest information as to the nature of the institution of the chorepiscopus comes only when it had already begun to decline. Our sources on the subject are the following Canons of local Councils: 13th of Ancyra (314), 14th of Neocaesarea (314-325), 10th of Antioch (341), 6th ofSardica (343-344) and 57th of Laodicea (343-385). Because the nature of the institution of chorepiscopi is of such importance for the history of the Church's unity, we shall attempt here to throw some light on it through a comparative study of these few sources" The Canon of the Council of Ancyra, d espite the numerous variants in the manuscripts" and the difficulties it presents in interpretation," undoubte dly treats the chorepiscopi in a different way from the following Canons and especially the last two listed . In general terms, what emerges from comparative study of these Canons is a steady diminu-
tion in the rights and importance of the chorepiscopi. Thus while the Canon of Ancyra is concerned, on the one hand to confine the episcopal rights of the chorepiscopus within his own territory (paroikia), and on the other to place these rights in close dependence upon the Bishop of the city,55 the Canon of Antioch about a genera tion later goes still further through a slight alteration which is of particular importance to history.56 In this Canon, we observe two points: a) It is clearly recognized that the chorepiscopi belong to the rank of Bishop ("although they have received the ordination of Bishop" ). This is a link with the p ast. On the other hand, b) they are explicitly told to confine themselves to ordaining lower clergy only ("to appoint readers and subdeacons and exorcists and not go beyond these appointments")." This is a preparation for the future. The a ttitude to chorepiscopi which had formed in the meantime is expressed by the Council ofSardica (344): in the country and the villages, a presbyter is sufficient where a presbyter is sufficient bec'ause of the small number of inhabitants," the appointment of a Bishop would be to d egrade his name and his authority.59 The following generation, represented by the Council of Laodicea (381),60 takes the next step of making the institution completely obsolete ("bishops should not be appointed in country areas")6! From this we may conclude that a) the deprecia tion and disappearance of the institution of chorep iscopi happe ned gradually, the chorepiscopi having originally been full Bishops ("having received the ordination of Bishop"), and b) this movement from many bishops to fewer" gathered pace during the fourth century,63 and was historically bound up with the increasing liturgical jurisdiction of the presbyters as evidenced by the 60th Canon of Sardica, which we have just looked at, and the 57th Canon of Laodicea, which abolished the chorepiscopi and replace d th e m with presbyters acting as vis itors
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From these conclusions about the development of the institution of chorepiscopi, it becomes clear that when the Christians of the countryside were detached from the ecclesia l unity in the city, they formed their own Churches under their
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own Bishops with their own Divine Eucharist. In consequence, when the Christians of the villages were detached from the Church of the city there was no question of breaking up the unity of each Church in the Eu charist. This d etachment did n ot create parishes, but new full local Churches with their own Bish ops 6s In this way, the principle that each Church is united in one Eucharist under one Bishop was preserved even after Christianity spread into the countryside.
3. The application of the principle of one Eucha/'ist and one Bishop in all geographical regions . Some problems with Eusebius' Ecclesiastical History. The application of the above conclusions to all regions during the period under discussion seems at first sight problematic on acco unt of certa in passages in Eusebius' Ecclesiastical History. These passages call in question the existence of one Bishop in each Church in the regions of Pontus, Gaul, Palestine and Egypt, and therefore, need to be looked at. Regarding Pontus, Eusebius writes that in the second century Dionysius of Corinth sent a letter "to the Church sojourning in Amastris together with those in Pontus ... mentioning their Bishop Palmas by name."o. Some" have seen 111 this passage, the existence of only one Bishop in the whole region of Pontus, even given that at the time Eusebius is referring to, Christian numbers had risen significantly in Pontus." Eusebius does indeed give su ch an impression in this passage as he does elsewhere when he is referring to the region of Crete; "Writing also to the Church sojourning in Gortyna together with the other paroikies in Crete, he commends their Bishop Philip."" But the question a rises of whether these passages ought to be regarded as precise historical sources testifying to the existence of only one Bishop in su ch extensive areas, or evidence of confusion created by Eusebius when he a llows later situations to find their way into his synthesis of the sources. On this question, it should be observed that in both the above passages it is implied that
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there are several paroikies in the regions of Pontus and Crete ("together w ith those in Pontus ..." and "together with the other paroikies in Crete"). During the period in question, the term paroikia as we shall demonstrate in more detail below did not mean "parish" in the later sense, but a full local Church with her own Bis hop.'o That the passages cited are not talking about paroikies without Bishops of their own, is evidenced by the fa ct that during precisely the years Eusebius is referring to there, apart from Gortyna in Crete there was also the Bishop of Knossos, Pinutus, w hom Eusebius himself knows of and mentions a little later.71 It is therefore not legitimate to make the above unclear passages of Eusebius the basis for the view that in extended territories such as Pontus and Crete, there were in the second century "paroikies" without Bishops of their own, which all came under one Bishop. With the phrase "their [i.e. the paroikies'J Bishop" (which, it should be noted, belongs to Eusebius and not to his sources), it is obvious tliat Eusebius' familiarity with the later metropolitan system is creeping in. Eusebius' Ecclesiastical Histort) presents similar problems in regard to Gaul during the time of Irenaeus. The obscurity of the passages Eccl. Hist. V23.3 and Vl-4 has given rise to the opinion that Irenaeus was the only Bishop in the whole region of Gaul," and p erhaps Bishop not only of Lyons, but also of Vienne at the same time." This gives the picture of an entire region with only one Bishop under whom was more tha n one Church. This, however, conflicts with the following points; a) In the inscription to the letter of the martyrs in Lyons, the phrase "those in Vienne and in Lyons in Gaul" (Ecci. Hist. V1.3), on which Nautin bases his conclusions, does not necessarily mean that Lyons and Vienne formed one diocese; because in that case the parallel w hich follows, "to the brethren in Asia and Phrygia," would have to be interpreted in the same way, despite that fact that, as we well know, there were many dioceses in the regions of Asia and Phrygia at a very early date." But apart from that, in the same letter, it is made absolutely clear further on (V 1. 13) that Lyons and
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Vienne formed two different Churches. The fact that Irenaeus composed the letter in the name of those in Vienne and Lyons does not mean that he was Bishop of both of these cities, but simply that becau se of what had happened to Pothinus, who was in prison, he was representing the Church of Lyons which was host to the martyrs from Vienne. Besides, the purpose of this letter is known: Irenaeus was interested in u sing the authority of the martyrs in order to persuade the conservative brethren in Asia to abandon their extreme position on the matter of penitents. It is obvious tha t this purpose would be better served if the letter were written also in the name of the martyrs from Vienne. The fact that Irenaeu s does n ot put his name to the letter as author reveals not only the purpose of the letter, but also the fact that he did not represent the Churches of both Vienne and Lyons. b) The tradition knows of absolutely no Bishop of Vienne by the name of Irenaeu s even though it knows of a whole series' of Bishops of other names.'s c) It is doubtful whether Irenaeu s was a bishop at the time w hen he composed the letter from the martyrs of Vienne and Lyons. Eusebius calls him "presbyter."" And w hile it is true that in Irenaeus' time this term was understood to include bishops, we cannot unquestioningly take this fact, as Nautin does," as support for the view that Eusebius was misled by the terminology and thus placed Irenaeus in the rank of presbyter. For even if we accept that the terminology was of such decisive importance in this case, we should not overlook the terminological distinction that was made between a presbyter and the presbyter, th e latter r eferring to th e "presiding-presbyter," i.e . the Bishop. 78 It would con sequently be more natural for Eu sebius to have w ritten "as the presbyter of the Church" rather than "as a presbyter of the Church," as we have in the text. 79 But apart from that, as is evident from the letter of the martyrs, Pothinus was stillliving, and was, therefore, the canonical Bishop of Lyons. In order to accept that Irenaeus was Bishop at the time w hen he composed the letter in the name of the martyrs of Vienne and Lyons, we have to suppose either that this letter was
written a fter the martyrdom of Pothinus (which would be incompatible with the purpose and content of the letter), or tha t when Irenaeus wrote the letter he was Bishop of Vienne, and was later transferred to Lyons which would conflict with the existing ancient tradition which, as we have seen, knows no Bishop of Vienne by the name of Irenaeus. There remains no choice, then, but to accept that Irenaeus was simply a presbyter at the time w hen he wrote in the nam e of the brethren in Vienne and Lyons, and su cceeded Pothinus in the see of Lyons - and only Lyons - after the latter 's martyrdom . d) In consequence of the above, Eusebius' obscure statem ent that Irenae us "oversaw" (epeskopei) the "paroikies in Gaul," d oes not imply that he was the only Bish op in that region in charge of more than one Church; instead, it should be regarded as a transposition of the concept of the rights of the metropolitan, alread y well developed in Eusebius' d ay, to the time of Irenaeus when such rights had not yet been d efinitively form ed. Such a nachronisms a re comm on in Eusebius as we saw in the case of Pontus and Crete.so If in the foregOing cases, Eusebius' Ecclesiastical History gives the mistaken impression that one Bishop headed more than one C hurch, in reference to Palestine, Eusebius gives the o pposite and, as will be shown, equally mistaken impression that more than one Bishop was heading one and the sam e Church. Thus referring to Alexander of Jerusalem, he w rites that he "was thought worthy of that bishopric, while Narcissu s, his predecessor, was still living," and therefore describes the episcopacy of Jerusalem as "the presidency of Narcissus with him (i.e. Alexander]."" As was natural, this led certain ancient'" and also more recen t'" historians to speak of Alexander and Narcissus serving jointly as Bishops of Jerusalem for a time. But if we leave aside once again the comments introduced by Eu sebius and confine ourselves to the sources he has in view, the conclusion will be different. Thus the p assage of a letter of Alexander's which Eusebius preserves," and w hich plainly forms the basis for his impressions set out above, reads: "Narcissu s salutes yo u, who held the episcopate here
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before me, and is now reckoned with me through prayers, being 116 years of age; and he exhorts you, as I do, to be of one mind," The phrase in this letter "now reckoned with me through prayers" (synexetazomenos moi dia ton euchon) gave rise to the view that these two Bishops shared the episcopacy, among historians who interpreted it as meaning "holding the same position in prayers as I do," But the true meaning of synexetazesthai (translated above as "reckoned with") at that period was "to be present" or simply "to be [somewhere]," as is shown in texts preserved by Eusebius himself8s In consequence, the meaning of this phrase is "who is present here with me through his prayers," This is supported by a more unequivocal reason why the theory of co-episcopacy is completely ruled out. In the passage of the letter cited, Narcissus is clearly described as "having held the episcopate here before me [sc, Alexander]," This phrase would not have been used if Narcissus and Alexander were , leading the same Church jointly," But the region over which the greatest problems arise is Egypt owing to the total lack of relevant sources for the first three centuries, In regard to this region, the mistake has repeatedly been made of filling in the gaps in the sources from the first three centuries by transposing onto that period states of affairs which we know of from the fourth century and later, Thus as to the position of the Bishop in Egypt, the view was formed , and became generally accepted that there was originally only one Bishop for the whole of Egypt, and that as a result, the presbyters there showed themselves especially powerfuL" As to the power of the presbyters, this view prevailed because in the fourth century such power is indeed to be seen, particularly as a result of the Arian controversies; but this does not mean that the same situation also obtained earlier, when, as we shall see later, presbyters nowhere enjoyed such independence and power, As to the existence of only one Bishop in Egypt, this view is again due to certain obscure and misleading passages in Eusebius, Thus in Ecclesiastical History v'22, Eusebius writes: "in that year, when Julian had completed his tenth year, Demetrius received the
charge of the paroikies at Alexandria;" and further on (VL2.2) he comments: "Laitus was governor of Alexandria and the rest of Egypt, and Demetrius had lately taken on the episcopacy of the paroikies there [sc, in Alexandria and all Egypt] as successor to Julian," The problem with these passages lies in their reference to several "paroikies" and one Bishop in Alexandria and Egypt in the late second century, If the word paroikia is taken to mean "parish" here, then in Egypt, at least, the principle of the assembly of all the Christians into one Eucharist did not apply around the end of the second century, If, on the other hand, the term is taken to mean the local Church, then it appears that the Bishop of Alexandria is in charge of more than one Church, It is consequently essential to see what the term "paroikia" means in Eusebius, so that we can go on to clarify the position of the bishop of Alexandria, The term paroikia occurs about forty times in Eusebius' Ecclesiastical History, but in none of these cases does it mean "parish" in the modern sense, The meaning of the term is always that of a whole local Church or bishopric, Thus he writes of the Church of Corinth, "First of all, it should be said of Dionysius that he held the throne of the paroikia and bishopric (episcope) of Corinth,"" Similarly of the Churches in Crete: "among these is included another letter to the people of Knossos, in which he exhorts Pinutus the Bishop of the paroikia","" and "Philip, whom we know from Dionysius' words as Bishop of the paroikia in Gortyna," Similarly, he writes of Lyons that "Irenaeus succeeded to the episcopacy (episcope) of the paroikia in Lyons, which had been h eaded by Potheinus;"'" and of Rome and Carthage, that "[Cornelius] made a list of the names and what paroikia each headed," and "first of all Cyprian, pastor of the paroikia in Carthage,"" Eusebius uses the word in the same sense of other bishoprics" and also of Alexandria of which he writes: "About the twelfth year of the reign of Trajan the above-mentioned Bishop of the paroikia in Alexandria died, and Primus, the fourth in succession from the Apostles, was chosen to the office,"" The common and noteworthy characteristic of all these passages
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is that the term paroikia which occurs there is used interchangeably as a synonym for, or added as an explanation of, the terms "church," Bishop, " "bishopric ! episcopacy" (episkope), "pastor," "ministry" (leitourgia) etc., which denote a full local Church with its own Bishop.'" If, then, the term paroikia has this sense in Eusebius, it is clear that in the case of Alexandria and Egypt it cannot m ean "parish," but "bishopric." In consequence, we have several bishoprics in Egypt during the second century not just one. Unequivocal evidence for this comes from the statement of Eusebius himself that right at the beginning of Christianity in Egypt the Eva n geli st Mark establi s hed many "churches" there." Specifically, indeed, we know that early in the fourth century it was possible to talk about many Bishops "around Egypt" serving "the paroikies around the country and the region."% T.h e existence of several bishoprics in Egypt already from the second century precludes the view that the Bishop of Alexandria was initially the o nly Bishop in that region. How do we then explain what Eusebius has to say about the leading position of Alexandria in relation to the paroikies around Alexandria and Egypt? First of all, it should be pointed out that in the first centuries the Christians in Egypt made a distinction between the Church of Alexandria, as the Church of the chief city, and the Churches around Alexandria which belonged to the countryside." The superiority of the Bishop of Alexandria in relation to the other Bishops in Egypt was evident from the beginning. In addition, it is noteworthy that even up to the time of Demetrius of Alexandria (189), Eusebius speaks of a paroikia, in the singular, in Alexandria," and only after that does he talk about "paroikies" around Alexandria. This timeframe fits in w ith the spread of Christianity outside the ci ties and the establishment of the institution of chorepiscopi as we have said above.99 Jt is, therefore, not improbable that the paroikies arowld Alexandria w ith which the Bishop of Alexandria is linked from Demetrius onwards were chorepiscopates. This probability accords both with the meaning of the term paroikia, which, as we have
seen, presupposes a Bishop of its own, and with Alexandria's position of superiority vis-a-vis the other paroikies, which gave Eusebius cause to write, again under the influence of later situations, that the Bishop of Alexandria had "taken on the episcopacy of the paroikies there."'oo In consequence, the region of Egypt too appears not to have ignored the principle of the unity of all the faithful in each paroikia - Church under the leadership of one Bishop. In the light of this, we are able to conclude that Ignatius' exhortation to the various Churches to remain united in one Eucharist only, under one Bishop and at one aitar, was a reflection of a corresponding historical reality. Throughout the first three centuries and, so far as we can tell, in all regions, the principle of the unity of each Church in one eucharistic assembly under one Bishop was faithfully observed. Hence around the beginning of the fourth century, when developments take p lace which will be looked at the Part III, the principle was being passed down that in each Church there was only one single altar (monogenes thusiasterion),'01 while the First Ecumenical Council explicitly lays down, despite the existing practical difficulties, that there can be only one Bishop in each citylD2 Here is the section of this Canon in which the consciousness of the Church of the first three centuries concerning one Bishop only in each Church reaches its climax: "Wherever, then, whether in villages or in cities, these [i.e. clergy of the "Cathari" returning to the Catholic Church] are the only people found to be ordained, let those who are in the clergy remain in the same rank. But if some of them come over where there is a Bishop or presbyter of the Catholic Church, it is clear that the Bishop of the Church will have the Bishop's dignity; he who was named Bishop by the so-called Cathari shall have the rank of presbyter, unless it shall seem fit to the Bishop to admit him to the honor of the title. If this should not be satisfactory to the Bishop, let the Bishop provide a place for him as chorepiscopu s or presbyter, in order that he may be evidently seen to be of the clergy;
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that there may not be two Bishops in the city." This insistent effort by the First Ecumenical Council to
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arrange things "so that there may not be two Bishops in the city" cannot be understood apart from the principle which a lread y appears clearly from the time of Ignatius according to w hich the unity of each Church is necessarily expressed through one Eucharist and one Bishop. The preservation and application of this principle is an historical fact, as w e have seen, until at least the beginning of the fourth century. The effects of this historical situation on the formation of the Catholic Church during the sam e period will be considered directly.
Chapter Two T HE DIVINE EUCHARIST, THE BISHOP AND THE UNITY OF THE "CATHOLIC CHURCH." THE IMPLICATIONS OF U NITY [N THE EUCHARIST AND THE B ISHOP FOR THE FORMATION OF THE C ATHOLIC C HURCH
The fact that each Church was united in one Eu charist "which is under the leadership of the Bish op" had a decisive influence on the formation of the Ca tholic Church during the first three centuries. Alread y from its first appearance in the sources, the term "Catholic Church" is inseparably bound up with the Divine Eucharist and the Bishop who led it. This is attested by the w ell-known passage from St Igna tius' Epistle to the Sm yrneans:
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See that you all follow the Bishop, as Christ does the Father, and the presbyterium as you would the apostles; and reverence the deacons, as a command of God. Let no one do anything connected with the Church without the Bishop. Let that be considered a certain (bebaia! eucharist which is under the leadership of the Bishop, or one to whom he has entrusted it. Wherever the Bishop appears, there let the multitude of the people be; just as wherever Christ Jesus is, there is the catholic Church. It is not permitted without the Bishop either to baptize or to celebrate an agape; but whatever he shall approve of, that is well-pleasing also to God, so that everything that is done may be assured and certain.' 03 The connection to be observed in this fundamental passage between the term "Catholic Church" and the Eu charist "under the leadership of the Bishop," gives rise to the following question: w hat is the rela tionship between unity in 107 •
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the Eucharist a nd in the Bishop and the ca tholicity of the Church in the first three centuries o f the form ation of the Ca tholic Church? In order to give an an swer to this question, it is necessary, first, to d efine the con ten t of the term "Catholic C hurch" o n the basis of the sources from the first three centuries. This content is usually taken b y scho lars to be self-evident, and this perha ps accounts for the fact that at least so far as we know no one has yet fully examined the history of this term on the basis of the sources. But an y conclusions as to the formation of the Catholic Church w hich are not based on the history of the term "catholic church" ca nnot be reliable. This is why we need to look closely at the influence of unity in the Eucharist and the Bishop on the form a tion of the Catholic Church on the basis of the history o f the term "catholic church." This w ill oblige us, m ore particularly, to examine the relationship of the unity o f the in the Eucharist and in the Bishop to: Church • a) the ca tho licity o f each loca l C hurch, b) the position of the Catholic C hurch viv-a-vis heresies and schisms, and c) the unity of the "Catho lic C hurch thro ug h o ut the world ." These three them es cover all aspects o f the "Catholic Church," as w ill be shown in our investiga tion of the history of this term.
the catholicity o f the C hurch did no t m ake its a ppearance as a geogra phical or quantitative notion, and should, therefore, not be tied in principle to the wo rld-wide or uni versal character of the Church .106 In order to d efine the exact content of this term, we must begin w ith the supplem entary question o f the ancient Greek language from w hich church literature bor rowed thi s te rm a n d th e prim a r y qu estio n of the ecclesiology of St Ignatius in w hose work this term first occurs. Thereafter w e shall need to compare the m eaning given to the term by St Ig natius w ith the ecclesiology of the generations preceding him from whom he draws his conceptions of catholicity and also with that of later times in which his influence was d ecisive especially as regards the connection of the term "Catholic Church" w ith each local Church. 1. The adjective katholike in Greek com es from the Aristotelian sense of kath' olou, which is used by Aristotle som etimes in contradistinction to to kata meroslO7 and som etimes to kath' ekaston,108 understood no t only as an ad verb but also as an adjective o f m anner so that it can m ean the sam e as the adjecti ve ka tholikos w 9 A ri s totl e did n o t gi ve ka tholou a geogra phical sense so as to m ean "world- wide" or "universal" nor a q uantitative sense which would ta ke it to m ean a sum or total of the "particulars" (epi merous or kath' ekaston). It is no table that whenever he d efines it he gives it a qualitative sense denoting what is fu ll, whole, general or common: "That which is true of a whole class and is said to hold g ood as a whole (which implies that it is a kind of who le), is true of a whole in the sense that it contains m any things b y being predicated of each, and b y all of them (e.g. m an, horse, god ) being severally on e sing le thing, because a ll are living things."'10 Aristotle precludes the geogra phical or quantitati ve sense of kathololl still m ore clearly w hen he uses the exa m p le: "As 'm an' belo ngs to the general (kath' 01011) and 'Ka llias' to the particular (kath' ekaston)."I11 Throug h the COmparison of the "general" (katho[ou) w ith man in a generic sense and of the p articular (katl!' ekaston) w ith the particular Imm an being, the m eaning of the term katholikos becom es clear. The kath ' ekaston is in no way a segment of the kathololl, but
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1. The Divine Eucharist, the Bishop and the catholicity of the local Church It is the p revailing view that the term "Catholic Church" d eno tes principally the universal or world -w ide Church, and refers to the local Church only secondarily and b y extensio n. This view, w hich has becom e established in recent years w hen cosm opolitan ideals have formed in people' s consciousness the schem e of "locality" versus "universality,"11J.1 has its roots in the time and the theology of the Blessed Augu stine w ho was the first to give the catholicity of the Church the sense par excellence of "universality."'os Bu t if we exam ine the sou rces of the first three centuries carefully, we shall see that
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constitutes its actu al concrete form. Each actual man is as much full m an as is m an in a generic sense (katho lou), w hich he encom passes in himself, constituting the only actual, personal expression it has in space and time. This sense of the tel m katholou or katholikos was preserved afte r A ris to tle, as its u se by Polybius,1I2 D io nysiu s o f H alicarnassu sJ\3 and Plutarch J\4 testifies. Philo who had a d ecisive influence on the world w hich surrounded the early Church d oes not d eviate from the Aristo telian sense of the term. Thus, fo r him too, the word katholikos d oes not have a geographical or quantita tive m eaning, but deno tes w hat is complete, full and general l 15 As a distinguished sp ecialist on the subject observes, J\6 in all these cases Philo fo llows Aristo tle. Su ch was the prevailing sense of the term katholikos in secular litera ture. The Aristo telian sense of katholou su rvived and was p reserved up to the time of early Christianity. H ow far the ecclesias tical literature of the first three centu• ries preserved the A risto telian sen se of this term is the question that w ill concern us next. 2. Of Christian literature, neither the New Testam ent nor the Septuagint u ses the term "Catholic Church." The Church of Antioch, in w hich o ther basic technical terms such as "bishop" and "Christian" were firs t u sed,JJ7 is the first to use this te rm in the p assage fro m Ig natius' Epis tle to th e Sm yrnaeans quoted above. liS The precise meaning of the tel m "Catholic Church" in this passage has repeatedly been a bone of contention. The m ain q uestion that has been p osed is w hether the d istinction here is between the universal and the local Church, or the invisible and the visible Church. Funk saw in this p assage a distinction between the visible and the invisible Church, the term applying to the invisible,!" w hile Ligh tfoot equated "catholic" w ith "universa l. "!20 Rom an Catholic his torians such as P. Batiffol,'21 and m o re recently G. Bardy,122 also consider that "catholic" here m eans "universal."!23 This view presupposes that in the text of Ignatius the "Catholic Church " is in contradistinction to the local C hurch. It is assumed, in other words, that Ignatius' thinking involved the scheme "locality-universa lity," thro u g h
w hich he conceived of and expressed the unity of the Church in his time as revolving arou nd two centers: the Bishop for the local C hurch, and Chris t for the universal Ch urch. In keeping w ith this interpretation, catholicity is applied here not to the local Church, but to the "universal" Church. In parallel, there d eveloped the view that katholou and epi merolls in the consciousness of the early Church were used express not so much as an opposition between locality and universality, but mainly as an opposition between the Church and the heresies or schism s: the Catholic Church represents the w hole, in contrast w ith the heresies and schism s w hich represent the part. Thus "catholicity" can also be applied to the local Church . The assumption underlying this view is that the tell n appears in the texts from the beginning in a sense of opposition to heresy and schism, and its ul timate conclusion is that for the early Church catholicity m eant orthodoxy.!24 Beginning w ith an exainination of these presuppositions, we observe that the scheme of an antithesis between locality and universality, often u sed to interpret the early Church's self-awareness, represents, as we have already observed ,!25 a la ter, cosmopolitan outlook fo reign to the m entality of the early Church. For precisely this reason, it is very risky to begin an investigation into the origins of catholicity with the scheme • "locality versu s universality." The o ther idea, according to w hich the consciousness regarding catho licity was born out of the Church's p olemic against heresy and schism , m akes an equally risky starting-point for research, becau se there is no thing to convince us that Ignatius - our most ancient reliable source - u ses the term to m ake a d istinction between the "catholic" Church and the heresies. As the whole of the eig hth chap ter of the Epistle to the Smyrnaeans testifies, Ignatius is referring to those within the Church no t those ou tsid e. It is necessary, then, to pose anew the question : w hat content h as th e catholicity o f the Chu rch according to Igna tius? In the text w here the term "Catholic Church" first occurs, we observe that it is talking about being devoted to the Bishop
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as Christ showed Himself devoted to the Father, and to the p resbyters as to Apostles, and to the deacons as to a "command of God." Nothing rela ting to the Church can exist without the Bishop. The only assured (beba ia) Eucharist is that which is performed by the Bishop or his representative. Wherever the Bishop appears, there should the local Church ("the multitude of the people")!" be, exactly as where Jesus Christ is, there is the "Catholic Church ." It is not permitted either to baptize or to "celebrate an agape" without the Bishop. But whatever he app roves, this is well-pleasing also to God so that whatever is d one may be assured and certain. It is quite obvious that the whole text refers to the unity of the local Church w hich revolves around the Bishop m It is he that sums up and incarnates the entire unity of the local Church. Whatever takes p lace, and above all those elemen ts which are expressions par excellence of unity, namely baptism,. the agape and the Divine Eucharist, acquire ecclesial substance (they are "assured a nd certain") only wh en they are expressed through the Bishop. This is summed up in the phrase: "where the Bishop is, there is the multitude," i.e. the local Church. But Ignatius also adds to this conclusion the com parison: "just as wherever Jesus Christ is, there is the Catholic Church." Wh at is the meaning of this "just as" (hosper) placed between the local Church and the "catholic" Church ? Does it introduce a relationship to a reality different from what precedes, or is it an expression of the same thing in another form? Linguistically, either sense is possible. The "just as" can mean either that the local Church is united around the Bishop whereas the Catholic Church is united around Christ, or that the local Church constitutes a reality exactly the same as that of the Catholic Church. Therefore, no d efinitive conclu sion can be d rawn from the narrow h ermeneutic method. This passage has to be p laced in the more general context of Ignatius's thou ght (broader hermeneu tic method ) and th en within the historical reality of its period (historical method) in order for definite conclusions to be drawn. We begin with the question: how d oes Ignatius under-
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stand the local Church and its rela tion to the Church generally? First of all, we obser ve that he, too, uses the Pauline phraseologi 2S and sp eaks of the Church "which is" in a certain city,''' and, as we have seen, refers clearly to one Eu charist in each city. It is, however, striking the way he d escribes each local Church a t the beginning of his letters. In the Epistle to the Ephesians, for instance, he writes: "Ignatius who is also called the God-bearer, to the Church which is in Ephesus in Asia, deservedly most happy, being blessed in the greatness and fullness of God the Father, and predestined before the ages for an enduring and unchangeable glory, united and chosen throu gh the true passion and through the w ill of the Father and of Jesus Christ our God."l3O The Church of Philadelphia he calls the "Church of God the Fa ther and of the Lord Jesus Christ." He uses the same style to d escribe the Church of Sm yrna D1 Unless these epithets are taken as empty rhetorical hyperbole, which is altogether improba ble, their use by Igna tius shows that the local Church is the very Church of God , pred estined before the ages, chosen and glorified. If, then, we allow a conceptual distinction between the Church of God and the local Church in Ignatius's consciousness, the Church of God is to be fo und fully and in all her glory in every place. The Church of God w hich "is" or "sojourns" somewhere d oes not merely resid e among the faithful of the local Church as a special sort of invisible state, but is identified with the faithful, i.e. the local Church. This is why Ignatius calls the Ephesia ns "all God-bearers and temple-bear ers, Christ-bearers, bearers of holiness" (9:2). This is why these very Ephesians are identified by Ignatius with the "Church renowned unto the ages" (8: 1). Here, then, is the first fundamental conclusion: the local Church, according to Ignatius, is the very Church of God, the eternal, full, and whole Church. Why? Having just described the unity of the local Church as the unHy of the Church with Christ and of Christ with the Father,132 Ignatius writes: "Let no one deceive himself: if anyone is not within the altar, he is deprived of the bread of God. For if the prayer of one or two possesses su ch power, how much
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more d oes that of the Bishop and the whole Church? Therefore he w ho does not come into the same place (epi to auto) has already shown pride and passed judgement on himself, for it is written, 'God opposes the proud' . Let us be careful, therefore, not to oppose the Bishop, tha t we m ay be subject to God." 133 This p assage is of great importance becau se it is so com prehensive. Coming immediately after the d escription of the unity of the local Church as expressing the unity of the Church with Christ and of Christ w ith the Father, in a certain sense it provides an analysis of the elements which m ake up this unity by virtue of which the local Church is iden tified with the whole Church. We should, therefore, take these elem ents one by one and examine them. At the center all Ignatius' thinking, lies the Divine Eucharist. Coming together, epi to allto, is the usu al expression to indicate the Divine Eucharist,'34 and here it is quite clear tha t .this is what it means. The Divine Eucharist is Ignatius's passionB5 He ad vises the faithful to come together frequently to celebrate it. ' 36 This insistence on Ignatius's part seems to stem from his ecclesiology. 137The Divine Eucharist is the body of Christ, the very flesh of the historical Christ which suffered and is risen l " The unity of the Church should be not only spiritual, he says, b ut also physical. ' 39 Through this physical unity which is realized in the Divine Eucharist, the local Church takes on historical substance. This is also w hy he identifies the local Church with the gathering for the Divine Eucharist, and not simply the local Church, but the "Church of God ": the deacons, being ministers of the Divine Eu charist, are m inisters of the Church of God.' 40 Both the local Church and the "Church of God" are expressed historically (in sp ace and time) throu gh the Divine Eucharist. We find ourselves confronted once again with the Pau line ecclesiologyl 41 The Church is the bod y of Christ. '" Ignatius is quite clear on the justification for this consciousness which he interprets fully: the Church is the body of Christ because the bod y of Christ is the historical Christ Himself" a nd the his tor ical Ch ris t is the flesh of the Divin e Eucharist.'" The local Church, then, is the w hole Church for
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no other reason than because the whole historical Christ is made incarna te within her through the Divine Eucharist. Precisely because of the Divine Eu charist, the local Church can be regarded as the Church of God, the w hole Church, and can be addressed as such through the epithets tha t we have seen. Because throu gh the unity of the body of Christ, she "p arta kes of God ." '" This leads Ignatius to stress another element in this passage. The Divine Eucharist is closely bound up with the Bishop as he IS In turn WIth "the w hole Church." These elem ents are so deeply bound up with one another tha t they are not clearly dIstingUIshed In Ignatius' thou ght. Thus, w hen he is talking about the Altar, he suddenly introduces the prayer of the Bishop and of the w hole Church. And w hen he is saying that one w ho d oes not participate in the Divine Eucharist is showing pride, he immediately ad ds that in order to avoid pride we should be subject to the Bishop. He indicates the sam e connection of the Altar with the Bishop m ore clearly when he says that anyone who d oes something "apart from the Bishop and the p resbyters and the d eacons" is the sam e as one who is outside the Altar l " This m ost profound bond between Bishop and Eucharist in Igna tius' thought has as a consequence ~ nother, m ore striking identifica tion: the Bishop IS Identified wllh the entire local Church. Thus, we reach the classic passage "w here the Bishop is, there is the multitude ... " Judging from the whole of Ignatius' theology, it appears that this passage d oes not have a merely hortatory sense - or if it has such a sense, it is no more than an expression and affirm ation of a reality which is understood ontologically. Ignatius d oes not hesitate to say that the whole multitude, i.e. the w hole loca l Church, appea rs before him in the person of the Bishop .l47 The "w hole multitude" of the Church of Ephesus I S present fo r Ig n a tiu s in th e p e r so n o f her Bis h op O nesimus. ' 48 This incarna tion of the local Church in the Bishop - the result, as we have seen, of the connection between the Bishop and the Divine Eucharist - leads to further consequences for the position of the Bishop in the Church. In th ese con seq u e n ces, th e ch a r acteri s tics of th e
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"catholicization" of the Church find their completion. "Where the Bishop is, there let the multitude be," because according to Ignatius the Bishop incarnates the multitude, the local Church. But the local Church is a full, complete entity, the w hole Church of God, because the whole Christ is to be found in her and makes her a unity, the one bod y of Christ, thro ugh the Divine Eucharist. In consequ ence, Ignatius does not hesitate to go on to link the Bishop w ith Jesus Christ. The Lord is called "Bishop."'" Whatever happens to the visible Bishop of the Church is tran smitted to the invisible Bishop, Jesu s Christ. The Bishop forms a "type" and icon of Christ or of the Father Himself, an icon and type not in a symbolic but in a real sense: "It is fitting to obey in no hypocritical fashion; since one is not deceiving this visible Bishop, but seeking to mock the One who is invisible." !50 This realist view of the relationship between the Bishop and the Lord allo,:"s Ignatius easily to interchange these two persons:!" when he is being led to martyrdom and is away from Antioch, the Lord is the Bishop of that local Church .152 Two different worlds are thus created: God with the Bishop, and those who are apart from the Bishop with the d evil. !53 Unity around the Bishop is a unity around God and in God. !>! "For as many as are of God and of Jesus Christ, these are with the Bishop ."'SS In the sam e way, union with the Bishop constitutes union with Christ, and vice versa.1S6 Wha t we have said already sets out the essence of the "catholicization" of the Church. The further consequences of these statements are drawn out by Igna tius himself. The unity of the Church is not simply eucharistic, but because of the relation of the Bishop to the Eucharist it becomes hierarchical as well. The Church of the Philadelphians realizes her "oneness" w hen she is "with the Bishop and the presbyters and deacons w ho are with him ."!57 Not only that, but the community cannot even be called a church without the clergy, i.e. the Bishop, presbyters and deacons: "without these, it cannot be called a church ."!SS The further consequences now follow natura lly: w hatever is accomplished in the Church is valid only when it is ap-
proved by the Bishop.!59 The Bishop is not fro m men or through men, but from Christ.!60 And unity around the Bishop is not the will of man, but the "voice of God." '6! The Bishop, in other words, is appointed as such by divine law, and unity around him is recognized as the will not of man but of God. Thus the "catholicization" of the Church leads to the sequence: will (gnome) of the Father - will of Jesus Christ - will of the Bishop. "2 The Catholic Church, as the w hole Church, is su ch by virtue of the fact that she has the w hole Christ. But the local Church too is likewise catholic, because she has the whole Christ through the Divine Eucharist. The Bishop as being directly connected with the Divine Eucharist represents the local Church in the sam e way as the whole Christ represents the generic (kathololl) or catholic Church. But given that both the whole Christ and the Bishop are connected with the Church in the Divine Eucharist, the kath' olou or Catholic Church is to be found where the Divine Eucharist and the Bishop are. Thus the Bishop, as it has been most aptly observed, comes to be "the center of the visible and also the true Chu rch,"'" and the local Church comes to be the "Catholic Church" herself. Thus, neither universal consciousness nor polemic against heresies can explain the origin of the "Catholic Church." Its presence in history follows the line w hich Ignatius presents to us in such a remarkably concise and comprehensive way, and which, curiously, has been overlooked by scholarly research: one Church, one Eucharist, one flesh and one cup, on e altar, one Bishop with the presbyterium and the deacons l64 Thus, in conclusion, the "Ca tholi c Church" is identified according to Ignatius with the w hole Christ, and the whole Christ is to be found and is revealed in the most tangible way in the eucharistic synaxis and communion of all the members of each Church under the leadership of the Bishop. In consequence, the local Church is catholic not because of her relationship w ith the "universal" Church, but becallse of the presence within her of the whole Christ in the one Eucharist under the leadership of the Bishop. In this way, each local Church having its own Bishop is catholic per se; that is to say, it is the concrete form in space and time of the whole
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body of Christ, of the "generic" (kath' olou) Church. From all this it is clear that the Aristotelian sense of the kath' olou which is inherent and takes its concrete form in the kath ' ekaston '65 has been preserved in Igna tius' use of the tenB. Just as for Aristotle, each actual human being is the full incarnation of man as a whole, so for Ignatius each local Church forms the incarnation of the w hole Christ an d the Church as a whole. This incarnation is full and real, so tha t it cannot be u nd erstood in terms of Plato's or Philo's philosophy, '" and is expressed par excellence in the one Eu charist "under the lead ership of the Bishop." But if Aristotle's sense of kath' olou has been taken up and preserved by church literature, this ha ppened because this term ad equately expressed a consciousness which already existed prior to the u se of the term "Ca tholic Church." What was this con sciou sness which Igna tius had inherited, and for the expression of which Antioch chose the term "Catholic Church"? O ur information ·on this will come from the ecclesiology of the generations immediately preceding Ignatius or contemporary with him to which the few surviving sources bear witness. 3. In our investigation of the origins of the unity of the Church, we saw that the Church first made her appearance as Jesus Christ Himself. By virtue of the inclusion in Him of the "many" for whom He was crucified and raised up, the Church constituted the unity of the very bod y of Christ in which the "many" become One p erson. This unity was expressed his torically in its fullness throu gh the Div ine Eucharist. There the One and the "many" meet regardless of their numbers becau se Christ was regarded as being present even if only "two or three" were gathered together (Mt. 18:20). The full presence of Christ, the whole Christ, was n ot tied to numbers or quantity, the indifference to which is expressed in the conjunction "or." This was manifested from the beginning as a reality in the local Church. From the m oment w hen the Church was united around the Divine Eucharist, w hich means from the beginning, she believed that s he constituted the w hole Christ and therefore the w hole Church. Thus, Paul calls the local Church of Corinth during the synaxis of the
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Divine Eucharist the whole Church. '" With the cOllsciousness of olleness (one Lord - one Divine Eucharist) there droeloped also the consciousness of wholelless, of the ka th' olou (the whole Christ - the full and certain Divine Eucharist - the w hole or Catholic Church ). Paul is a clear witness to the connection between the oneness and the katholou of the Church through the Divine Eucharist. The early Church had a sensitivity about dismemberment of the whole w hich d eserves our a ttention: "let us not tear the members ap art. "'68 This shows that she understood herself not only as one, but a lso as wholeness and fullness. Hen ce, there arose the consciou sness of the Church as the fullness of Christ which is m anifested in Paul's letters to the Ephesians and Colossians.'69 How sh ould the "fullness" (pleroma) and the recapitula tion of everything in Christ be understood in these Epistles? The opinions of commentators differ."o At any rate, it is highly doubtful whether they ca n be unders tood quantita tively, as Chris t being "complem ented " by the Church. It is more likely and more accurate, even where the language is tha t of Christ being "complem ented" by the Church, tha t this should be understood not as a matter of addition but as an expression of the fu ll presellce of the aile within the other. The Church is the fullness (pleroma) of Christ becau se she constitutes Christ in His fullness. The sam e applies to recapitula tion (anakephalaiosis). Although the term is used by Paul in a cosmological sense, it is not devoid of ecdesiological significance. The term seems to be used in the sense of the new Adam.l7l The human being par excellence includes within Himself the w hole of humanityln and recapitulates all things in Himself.173 The "many" are united in Him, and through the m any He constitutes not only the one Ad am par excellence, but also the full and completed new Adam, in other words his fullness. But as the Apostle Paul himself explains, '" recapitulation in Christ applies above all to the Church, "w hich is His body, the fullness of Him w ho fills all in all." Therefore, however, much these two Epistles show tendencies to interpret the bod y of Christ in a cosm ological rather than a strictly ecd esiological sense
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(and for this reason are considered d eutero-Pauline by som e scho lars), the fact that the "fullness" refers par excellence to the Church is quite clear. This fullness of the bod y of Christ is recognized bo th by the Epistles m e ntioned above a nd b y those to the Corinthians as existing in each local Church. Th e Church of Ephesu s is regard ed as "on e body,"175 an d the Colossians a re likewise called to be o ne bod y176 Thus, the consciousness tha t the local C hu rch con stitutes th e full bod y of Christ, th e catho licity of w hich d oes n ot n eed com p lem enting b y the o the r local Church es, a ppears w idespread in the Pauline Ep istles certainly on the eviden ce of those w hich are addressed to local Churches. Hen ce, the Church of Corinth is called b y Paul " the whole Church" (Rom. 16:23 an d 1 Cor. 14:23). Thus from the "whole Church" of Paul, we have arrived
of the Church . First Clem e nt does no t of course d evelop this them e as b roadly as Igna tius d oes because this ep istle represents a p eriod w hich is facing different problem s, specifically the m ajor problem of transition from the apostolic to the subapostolic age through the link of apostolic su ccession, something tha t d oes n ot appear as a problem in Ig na tius. But, it is notew orthy tha t in con fronting with this p roblem too, 1 C le m e nt re vea ls a con scio u s n ess tha t the "catholicizatio n" of the Church is accomplished on the basis of the "gifts of the episcope" w h ich is to say the Eu ch a rist. Thus w hile the Bishop is absen t from this text, for linguistic rather tha n substantive reason s,181 the ins titutio n o f the episcope is present, and is connected in a notable way with the Eucharist. "Th eir" ministry (i.e. tha t of the A postles) or of those appointed b y them consists essentially in offering the Eucharist. Althou gh the tellIl leitourgia ("liturgy" or " ministry") is u sed by Clem ent in va riou s different ways,l82 (it is noteworthy tha t in the case of the "presby ters" who h ad been deposed and those whom they had succeeded) it is u sed par excellence in the sense of "offering the gifts." I83 The dismissed "presbyters," then, had as their main task the offering of the Gifts. This alon e is m ention ed in connection w ith th eir dismissal w h ich for this reason is considered "n o sm all sin" (44:4). In its con cern to preserve the ch a racteristics of catholicity in the Church of Corinth, 1 Clem ent, like Ign atius, links h er Bish op and clergy with the Lord through the Apostles;l84 not in an y abstract way o r for an y other reason, n or on a theoretical and theological level, but in rela tion to the Divine Eu ch a rist w hich is offered by them . And, even if it is supposed tha t with 1 Clement certain Rom an categories creep into the way th e characteristics of catholicity are inter p reted of (see for insta nce the u se of the term "legitima te" in 40:4), this d oes no t give the historian the right to speak of catholicity appearing with 1 Clem ent. O n the contrary, from wha t we ha ve m aintained here, it is clear tha t there is n o con ceivable relationship, let alone iden tity, between the Ro m an spirit and catho licity aro und the time o f Ign a tius becau se catholicity arises out of the local Church ' s consciousness of constitut-
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naturally at the "Catholic Church" of Ignatius . G oing on to examine other texts belo nging to the period prior to Ign a tius, we have n o difficulty in drawing the sam e conclusion from the first epistle of Clem ent. There too, the Pauline and Ig na tian idea tha t the local Church is identified w ith the Church of God is w idespread. The Church o f Rom e a nd the C hurch of Corinth are each separa tely called the "Church of God ," 177 and their fa ithful are "elect a nd sanctified ." There w as a "full o utpo uring of th e H oly Spirit" on all the Christia ns o f Corinth178 so tha t the Church of Corinth can w ithout h esita tion be called a "portion of the h oly" (meris agiou). As v aria tions in the cod ices a ttest, it is not impossible that this is a n indirect refere nce to p articipation in the Div ine Euch a rist. I " But 1 Clem ent gives clearer expression to the consciousn ess tha t the local Church fo rms the w h ole body of Christ w h en in referen ce to the disturbances in Corin th it d evelops the Pauline idea of the bod y of Christ. ISO From the v ie wpo int of con sciousn ess, the n, the a ntiquity of the Church's catho licity goes back to the earliest texts, a nd from Paul's time to tha t of Ig n atius continues to be understood as the fullness o f the body of Christ in each Church. What can we say ab ou t the outw ard m arks of this catholicity? Exactly as in Ign a tius, so in 1 Clem ent, uni ty in the Divine Eucharist is the expression par excellence of the cath olicity
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ing the whole Christ The external marks which express this consciousness are essentially an d primarily the Divine Eucharist as the bod y of Christ, and the Bishop who offers it ("with the presbyterium and the deacons"). These fOHlI the indispu table historical expressions of catholicity which 1 Clemen t does not invent, but upholds at a period which was, as we have seen, highly critical for the history of the Church. In consequence, 1 Clement is not innova ting and d oes not, as has been maintained , introdu ce the Roman spirit into the teaching about catholicity. But in response to the urgent historical need s of its time, when the Apostles w ere starting to disap pear, it connects two genera tions throu gh an existing link, that of the Divine Eucharist with w hich the Bishops or "presbyters" who offered it had always been inseparably connected . Without a doubt, in d oing so, it is making an interpretation and speaking theologically. It develops teachings such as those of a priesthood which exists by divine law and is understood iconically,'85 obedience to the clergy as to God, 186 a clear distinction between clergy and laity I" etc. But this theology d oes not create either the consciousness of catholicity or new external characteristics of catholicity. These already existed : 1 Clement merely interp rets them. Thus, the "presbyters" and apostolic su ccession were recognized as cha racteristics of the Catholic Church before Igna tius during th e cru cial gen e ration w h e n the Apos tles were d isap pearing; and for that generation as for Ignatius, the recognition carne from the Church's consciousness shaped in the celebration of the Divine Eucharist that she constitutes the whole and full bod y of Christ Similar conclusions can be drawn from study of another text which probably represents the same period as 1 Clement Judging from the fact tha t both these texts are gravely concerned with the same problem : the transition from the a postolic age to a situation where the Apostles were gradually d isappearing, but had not yet all gon e. This is the Didache 18B In regard to two points of the greatest interest for our study, the way this problem in add ressed is cornmon to both
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these texts. Just as 1 Clement recognizes the fullness of the local Church on the theoretical level, iden tifying her with the very Church of God , so the Didache recognizes the fu llness of the local Church on the practical level setting her as judge over the itinerant charismatics and thus in essence above them. We find the same in another text from about the same period: the third Epistle of John. This text speaks of a certain Diotrephes "who loves to have preeminence" w ho clearly presided over a local Church and did not "acknowledge the authority" of the Apostlesl 89 The fact that this is condemned by John does not alter the situation from an historical angle. The question of whether w e have here a clash between "spirit" and "hierarchy" is of only secondary importance for history. The reality is that at the time of 3 John the local Church was able, throu gh the Bishop who represented her, to judge the charismatics and d ecide whether or not to receive them. In the same way, all that the Didache says about the charismatics being judged by the local Church should be understood not as a mere desire on the part of its author or compiler, but as a reflection of a certain state of affairs that did exist and was widely spread . In keeping with this, every charismatic had to be subject to approval by the local Church,'''' and she would judge whether he w as a genuine a postle or prophet and should be received . This is the first point that testifies to the fullness of the local Church. The other problem for this transitional generation, namely the su ccession to the ministry of the apostles who were no longer there, is solved as in 1 Clement: a) "Bishops and d eacons" are ordained, that is !'presbyters" or "Bishops presbyters - d eacons"l9l and b) - most importantly for us here - the transition or "su ccession" from the apostolic to the subapostolic age take place through the Divine Eucharist. When 1 Clement speaks of the succession of the Apostles, it refers to the "offering of the gifts" as their "ministry." The Didache, also speaking about the ordination of the "Bishops and deacons," says, "for they also serve for you the ministry of the prophets and teachers" (15:1 ). What is this "ministry of the prophets and teachers"? I " Previously, w hen speaking
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about the Divine Eu charist (ehs. 9-10), the author of the Didache has clearly alluded to the p rophets offering the Divine Eucharist wh enever they were p resent in the local C hu rc h : "a ll ow th e proph e ts to m ake tha n ksg ivi n g (ellcha ristein) as much as they want." It is precisely this ministry that he seems to have in view also w hen he speaks of the ord ination of the "Bishops and d eacons." This is apparent from the fact that immediately before this (ch. 14) he has spoken at length about the Divine Eucharist, and still more from the conjunction "therefore" with w hich he links wha t has been said about the Divine Eucharist w ith the passage concerning ordination of "Bishops and d eacons" as ministers to serve the ministry of the cha risma tics. It is also notewor thy that this is done not by introd ucing a new institution to replace one which was disap pearing, bu t simply by emphasizing and reinforcing an office which already existed but was often overshad owed by the Apostles and other • charismatics. This is indicated clearly by the passage: "Do not therefore d espise them" (literally "overlook," hyperidete). For they are your honored ones, together with the prop hets and teachers" (15:2). The phrase "do not d espise them" testifies to their preexisten ce. Thus, the connection of the subapostolic age to the apostolic is achieved here too throu gh the already existing link that expressed par excellence the catholicity of the local Church namely the Divine Eucharist and the ministers w ho led it. The Eucharist is of tremendous ecclesiological significance also for the Didache because according to this text too it is inseparably bound u p with the unity of the Church .'93 Thus in confronting, w ith 1 Clement a nd 3 Joh n, the gradual loss of the Apos tles an d other cha rismatics, the Didache preserves the con viction that d espite the lack of Ap ostles a nd charisma tics, the existing Eucharist and the permanent ministers w ho lead it represent the local Church in her fullness as the "Church of God ." From study of these texts, it can be concluded without difficulty that the three generations known to Ignatius, which go back to the apostolic age itself, believed that throu gh the one Eu charist "which is under the lead ership of the Bishop"
each loca l Church is revealed in history as the full bod y of Christ and , therefore, as "the whole Church," as the Apostle Paul puts it. It was precisely this consciousness that Ignatius gave expression in his use of the term "Catholic Church." Derived from the Aristotelian sense of kath' olou, this term provided with the greatest precision the verbal form required to express this consciousness given that the kath' 0 1011 is understood as being fully incarnate and made concrete through the kath' ekaston. Thus each local Church has come to be the concrete form in history of the kathoLou Church, the Catholic Church herself. 4. The historical conditions in w hich the generations following Ignatius lived obliged the Church to connect her ca tholicity with the element of Orthodoxy as we shall see at greater length shortly. Nevertheless, even at that period , the term "Catholic Church" did not cease to refer principally to each local Church. The following examples from the history of the term are sufficient to demonstra te this: a) In the Martyrdom of Polycarp, w hich belongs to the first or second generation following Ignatius,''' the term "Catholic Church" now appears clearly as a technical term, but again used of the local Church. Thus in 16:2, we read that Polycarp was Bishop of "the CathoLic Church in Smyrna."!" This is in accordance w ith the whole ecclesiology of this text, in which the local Church, just as in Paul's Epistles, 1 Clement and Ignatius, is identified with the very "Church of God ."'96 Each local Church constitutes a "paroikia of the Catholic Church."'97 As a paroikia, the local Church does not constitute a segment of the Catholic Church, but the place in which the whole Catholic Church dwells"" The meaning of the term, in consequ ence, is no different from that given it by Ignatius: in each place the Church kath' olou, the whole Christ, is mad e a concrete historical reality. Thus, the Church in Smyrna is called in the Martyrdom of PoLycarp the "Catholic Church." '99 But in the Martyrdom of Polycarp, we also find the phrase: "of the Catholic Church throughout the world" (8:1). This passage is usu ally adduced as proof that the "Catholic Church" was identified in Polycarp's time w ith the "universal"
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Church ' OO On the contrary, however, this passage proves that the phrase "Catholic Church" did not mean "universa l Church." This is shown, we consid er, by the position of the phrase "Ca tholic Church" alongside the d es ig n a tion "throughout the world." For if it is accepted that "catholic" is to be interpreted as "universal" (oikoumenike) then we are confronted with a curiou s tautology which would yield the meaningless phrase "and of all the universal (oikoumenike) Church which is throughout the universe (oikoumene) !201 b) The first or second generation after the Martyrdom of Polycarp continued to apply the term "Catholic Church" to each local Church. Thus, Tertullian u ses the term in the plural, writing of "Ca tholic Churches," 20' which obviously precludes the identification of this term with the "universal" Church. c) Even in the third century, the term "Ca tholic Church" cont~nues to refer to the local Church. This is shown by two typical examples. The first comes from Cyprian's well-known work De catholicaeecclesiae unitate, which by "catholica ecclesia" means the local Church of Carthage;203 the unity of which Cyprian was trying to protect by this work. This becomes highly significant for the history of the term "Catholic Church" if we take into account the fact that the title most likely belongs to Cyprian himself.204 In consequence, there is no basis for the view'05 that Cyprian was the first to formulate the idea of church organization on the basis of the Roman empire; in other words as a world-wide unity of which the local Church es form parts complementary to one another. The second example comes from other texts of Cyprian's time. Thus, the Roman confessors of whose d eclarations Cornelius informs Cyprian u se the telln "Catholic Church" as follows: "Nor are we ignorant of the fact that there should be one Holy Spirit, one bishop in the Catholic Church."206 If in this passage catholica is translated "universal," it autom atically yields the impossible sense "there should be one Bishop in the universal Church"!,07 It is clear that here "catholic" refers once again to the local Church. The evidence of this
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passage takes on special significance for the historian because it comes not only from Cyprian but also from other Churches of the West (Rome and Africa), and is linked also with the Churches of the East as is shown by the exact translation of the passage in Cornelius' letter to Fabius of Antioch' 08 A similar use of the teun "catholic" is to be found in other texts of the same period. 2I19 Thus, the identification of the "Catholic Church" with the episcopal diocese, and indeed w ith the Bishop, is more than clear in Cyprian's words to Antonianus: "You also wrote that I should pass on a copy of this same letter to Cornelius our colleague, so that he m ay put aside all anxiety and know at once that you are in communion with him, that is, with the Catholic Church."210 The d eclaration of the confessors of Rome "that there should be one Bishop in the Catholic Church" combined with Cyprian's fundamental ecclesiological principle which prevailed at that time: "the Bishop is in the Church and the Church in the Bishop,"m ·ties in Cyprian's time fully with that of Ignatius from the viewpoint· of consciousness concerning the catholicity of the Church. Just as for Ignatius, the Bishop forms the center not only of the visible "but also of the true Church," so also for the Church of Cyprian's time, the whole Church (this is the m eaning of the term ecclesia) is present in the Bishop. And just as for Ignatius there is "one Bishop" in the Church, so also for Cyprian's time "there should be one Bishop in the Catholic Church." Only one difference is evident between these two p eriods which is a difference not of substance but of emphasis: whereas in Ignatius' time, the local Church united in the person of the one Bishop was "the whole Church" herself by reason of being united in one Eucharist, this latter elem ent - although, as we have seen, not absent as an historical fact in the period after Ignatius - had faded in the consciousness of later genera tions as an elem ent in catholicity. Thus in Cyprian's time, the one Bishop is no longer emphatically connected with the one Eucharist. Such changes in emphasis which do not affect the substance of things are normal in history. And this change occurred because, as we shall see below the dangers
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from heresies and schisms obliged the Church to concentrate her attention on other elements of her catholicity.
2. The Eucharist, the Bishop and the position of the "Catholic Church" vis-a-vis heresies and schisms. 1. From the time of the Martyrdom of Polycarp onwards, the attentive student of the sources will observe that the catholicity of the Church is now emphatically connected not so much with the Eucharist as with the orthodoxy of the Church. This change is attested mainly by the way in which the texts refer to the institution and function of the Bishop. While, as has been observed,'" "curiously, Ignatius does not consider preaching an indispensable attribute of the Bishop (Philad . 1:2):'213 a generation or two later the emphasis is placed precisely on the Bishop's teaching work. The Martyrdom of Polycarp (16:2) refers to the Bishop Polycarp in the following terms: "The most wonderful martyr Polycarp, who became in our times an apostolic and prophetic teacher, Bishop of the Catholic Church in Smyrna." As this passage shows, the Bishop already concentrates in himself all the properties of the charismatics (he is "apostolic" and "prophetic"); but while these properties include the offering of the Eucharist, the emphasis is placed heavily on his teaching authority: "for every word that went out of his mouth has been and will be accomplished." 21' The same emphasis on the teaching authority of the Bishop can be seen in the rest of the texts from the latter half of the second century. In the fragments of Hegesippus (c . 175 AD), preserved in Eusebius' Ecclesiastical History (IV.22), each local Church appears united in her Bishop who is regarded as the authoritative bearer of the true apostolic tradition: "il1 even) succession and in even) city that is held which is preached by the law and by the prophets and by the Lord."2Is From historical research and also his own personal knowledge,2l' Hegesippus goes on to give the names of Bishops going back to the Apostles themselves through a continuous succession. A few years later (around the year 185), Irenaeus continues Hegesippus' line of argument. Z17 True gnosis consists in the
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teaching of the Apostles and the agreement existing from the beginning in the Church throughout the whole world and the extension of the body of Christ through the succession of the Bishops to whom the Apostles had entrusted the va rious local Churches. Z18 Furthermore, according to Irenaeus, the Bishop is the authoritative teacher not simply by virtue of his apostolic succession, but also by virtue of his ordination. This element, appearing in the sources for the first time, serves to combine teaching authority with charismatic authority in general in the Bishop. In contrast to the heretics who maintain private assemblies, the "presbyters" of the Church were not, like them, merely teachers, but had the infallible "charisma" of truth. 219 What caused such prominence to be given to the teaching authority of the Bishop, and what implications did this have for the history of the term "Catholic Church"? Once we have given an answer to these questions, we shall examine how unity in the Eucharist arid in the Bishop relates to this new stage in the consciousness of catholicity during the first three centuries. It is not an accident that this emphasis on the teaching authority of the Bishop coincides with the time of Polycarp's martyrdom. With the death of Polycarp, the last living bearers of the memory of the apostolic teaching disappear. The final, rather modest attempt at referring back to apostolic times by way of memory is to be found in Irenaeus who speaks of his own and Florinus' shared recollections of what Polycarp had told them of his contact with the Apostles in his youth.'zo But, as we have seen, Irenaeus by no means confines himself with this sort of argument, and subsequent generations no longer use living memory at all as a proof of the orthodoxy of the Church. The disappearance of the living and immediate bearers of this m emory created of itself the clear need to stress the teaching authority of the Bishop, just as at another time (see 1 Clement and the Didache), the disappearance of the Apostles had required stress to be laid on the lifelong and p ermanent priesthood of those who offer the eucharistic Gifts .
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But apart from this reason, the stress on the teaching authority of the Bishop also became imperative as an answer to the challenge of the Gnostic heresy. If the heresies of those times can be regarded as anti-historical,'21 then Gnosticism more particularly can be said to constitute the most intellectualized form of religion. For the history of the notion of catholicism, it is a fact of especial importance that it was the Gnostics and not the Orthodox who first introduced the idea of apostolic succession. This indicates that the expression of the consciousness of catholicity did not have orthodoxy as its focal point from the beginning. The first reference to apostolic succession is to be found in the Gnostic epistle of Ptolemy to Floras (165 AD)222 who appears again reiterating the claim of his teacher Valentinus to apostolic succession. This is explained if one takes into account that the Gnostic heresiarchs remained within the Church for a long time while they were already preaching their heresy.223 Rome was full of teachers and philosophical schools in the second century AD; and heresiarchs such as Marcion, Basileides and Valentinus contrived for years to be in contact with the Church while they were teaching heretical doctrines. Why did the Gnostics claim apostolic succession? The reason should be sought in the fact that the primary and most grave accusation against them was that they were teaching "new things." In order to refute this accusation, they maintained that they possessed a secret and "hidden" tradition going back to the Apostles. 224 But what is characteristic in the present instance is that they understood this succession as a succession of teaching, (the type of succession that existed from the teachers of the Greek philosophical schools) which forced the Church to stress the already existing, but not greatly emphasized, capacity of the Bishop as teacher and of the Church as the storehouse of truth. 225 This prominence given to the teaching authority of the Bishop, combined with the central place that he held in the Church's consciousness regarding catholicity, brought with it corresponding developments in the notion of the "Catho-
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lic Church." Previously, as we have seen, the Church saw herself as "catholic" in the sense of the full presence within her of the whole Christ through the Divine Eucharist and the Bishop who offered it. Now, because of the increased emphasis in the meantime on the teaching work of the Bishop who expressed the Church's unity, "catholic," little by little, took on the meaning of the orthodox Church. Characteristic examples of such a development are the conceptions of the "Catholic Church" in Irenaeus, Tertullian, the author of the Muratori Canon, and Clement of Alexandria, who all lived around the end of the second century. According to Irenaeus, "the Church of God" is usually understood as contrasted with the heretics.'26 The Church is presented as possessing her own system of teaching,227 and furthermore, which is more important, as supported by her teaching mission as by a "pillar."228 For this reason, wherever there is a reference to the Church as a whole, this is always done almost exclusively in order to emphasize her preaching and teaching.'29 "The whole Church" (tota ecclesia) in Irenaeus' time is used as an expression and proof of orthodoxy in contrast with heresy. Thus the college of the Apostles was not only the Church par excellence, but also the whole Church (tota ecclesia) "from which every Church had its origin."230 It is characteristic that "the whole Church" is not connected here in any way with the concept of universality. But it is equally characteristic of the development which had taken place in the meantime that it does not appear as in Paul and Ignatius in reference to the synaxis of the Divine Eucharist but as proof of the Church's orthodoxy: the whole Church was incarnate in the college of the Apostles, free of heretics, because "there was no Valentinus there then, nor any of the others who destroy themselves and their followers."231 Similarly the understanding of the external marks of catholicity takes on a new emphasis as we believe is shown in the following example. Irenaeus mentions 1 Clement' at one point232 and refers incidentally to apostolic succession. But the interpretation of it that he gives is noteworthy and forms a clear picture of the development that had taken place
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in the understanding of the marks of catholicity. Whereas Clement, as we have seen, corulects apostolic succession with the offering of the Gifts, meaning the Divine Eucharist - the dismissal from which of the Apostles' successors had prompted the composition of the letter - this is overlooked by Irenaeus who sees the purpose of 1 Clement as being instead the renewal of apostolic faith in Corinth. The disturbance in Corinth which 1 Clement attempts to quell is for Irenaeus a matter of faith rather than of liturgy. Because apostolic succession, for the Church of his time, meant principally the guarantee of orthodoxy and the transmission of the apostolic tradition. In Tertullian, it is equally clear that "Catholic Church" is a technical term denoting the "Orthodox Church" in contradistinction to the heresies.'" The term "Catholic Church" also has the sense of "orthodoxy" in the fragments of the so-called Muratori Canon. In this text, a distinction is made between those books of the New Testament which the "Catholic Church" accepts and uses and those which the heretics accept and which, therefore, "cannot be accepted by the Catholic Church."234 Here, too, the term "Catholic Church" means the true and Orthodox Church which possesses the correct canon of Holy Scripture in contrast to the heretical groups. It should be noted that the term does not indicate the "universality" of the Church in this text either, given that, when it is a matter of her "universality," the Church is described as "one Church, spread over all the world." 235 After Irenaeus and at the beginning of the third century, the term "Catholic Church" continues to be connected mainly with the notion of orthodoxy. Thus according to Clement of Alexandria, the "Catholic Church" means the true and Orthodox Church in contrast with the heresies.2J6 The heresies are later human assemblies.'37 The "Catilolic Church" is the true and ancient Church whose walls the heretics have " clandestinely" dug through"" and which they "are eager to cut asunder into many [churchesl ."239 But in contrast with the divisive efforts of the heretics, the unity of the Catholic Church is stressed: "We say that the ancient and catholic
Church is one only."'40 Such was the history of the term "Catholic Church" from the middle of the second century to the beginning of the third. The threat of heresies and of Gnosticism in particular obliged the Church to give increased emphasis to the element of orthodoxy, in such a way that the "Ca tholic Church" was contrasted with the heresies, and the Bishop was seen as the successor of the Apostles not so much in leading the Eucharist, as was the case earlier, but rather in apostolic teaching. This gives rise to the question: what was the meaning of unity in the Eucharist and the Bishop during this period in the history of the "Catholic Church"? Despite the increased emphasis on the component of orthodoxy, the Divine Eucharist continued even in this period to be inseparably bound up with the catholicity of the Church. This cOilllection appears in the sources under two aspects. Firstly, orthodoxy is unthinkable without the Eucharist. This is expressed emphatically by Irenaeus who more than anyone else stresses the element of orthodoxy at this period. Connecting orthodoxy with the Eucharist, he writes, "our doctrine (i.e. the orthodox faith) is agreed on the Eucharist, and the Eucharist confirms our doctrine ... For we offer Hinl [Godl His own, consistently proclainling communion and union and confessing the rising of flesh and spirit."'41 Besides, it is well-known that Irenaeus attributes immense importance to the Eucharist in the Church's struggle against heresies especially against the dualism of the Gnostics. According to Irenaeus, the Eucharist constitutes tile strongest affirmation of the value of creation and of the ma terial world,''' and also the expression par excellence of the unity of the Church in the body of Christ."3 The second aspect under which orthodoxy appears in connection with the Eucharist in the sources of the period under examination is expressed clearly in these sources through the principle that the Eucharist without orthodoxy is an impossibility. This principle requires particular examination because it is the most decisive factor in the position of the Catholic Church vis-ii-vis heresies.
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Orthodoxy had of course a lways been a precondition in the Church for participation in the unity of the Eucharist as shown by the confessions of faith incorporated into liturgical texts which are known a lready from New Testament times' 44 The same precondition was preserved insistently in the early Church especially in the East."5 But the most decisive period for the establishment of this principle in the Church's consciousness proved to be the second half of the second century and the beginning of the third. A contributory factor in this was the development in the phenomenon of heresy itself which took place in the meantime. Heresy appears as a threat to the unity of the Church even from New Testament times (Acts 20:29-30)."6 But during the second half of the second century, heresy starts to be characterized by a tendency to take on an ecclesial shape. From the notion of a personal opinion or choice, which was the original meaning of the term hairesis,247 or that of a "school of thought" which it took on subsequently on the model of the Greek philosophical schools,'" during the period we are looking at heresy began to develop into organized groups on the model of the Catholic Church. Rome, for example, was the scene of an historically unprecedented coexistence of heretical groups'" which did not content themselves with a teaching mission, but, perhaps in order to counter the arguments of the Catholic Church, sought to obtain ecclesial status themselves. Thus, an effort can be observed on the part of heretical groups at this period to put bishops at their h ead, as shown by the case of the Theodotians at the time of Pope Zephyrinus (199-217), who persuaded the confessor Natalius to become their Bishop in return for a salary.250 This effort on the part of the heretical groups occasioned further clarification of the Church's catholicity in her consciousness and thus brought about the following very important development: the catholicity of the Church now began clearly to take shape as an expression of that Church which in the person of her own Bishop, who preserved the historical and charismatic continuity of her being, combined at once right liturgical life and right faith. This consciousness which forms one of the
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most decisive stages in the development of ecclesial catholicity begins with Hippolytus and comes to completion with Cyprian. Of Hippolytus's works, the Philosophoumena or Refutation of All Heresies shows that the "Catholic Church" of the beginning of the third century saw herself as one in each city, distinguished from the other groups in that they were simply "schools" or places of teaching, while the Catholic Church was a liturgical community, centered on the Divine Eucharist which preserved strictly defined boundaries around itself. Thus Hippolytus, being unable to accept more than the one Church in Rome, calls Callistus' group a "school" which is outside the communion of the Church" l and cannot be called a "Catholic Church." '" Thus at this period, the consciousness was clearly formed that the "Catholic Church" was a notion necessarily including, apart from orthodoxy, a strictly ecclesial or liturgical communion. This is why Origen speaks in his writings of two groups in Christianity which he contrasts with one another: one is called "churchmen" (ekklesiastikoi) and the other "those from the heresies,"") and he prides himself on belonging to the group not simply of "Christians" but of "churchmen."'" One who belongs to the groups of the heretics calls himself a "Christian" ("professione quidem christian us est, intellectll fidei haereticlls et perversus est" - "he is professedly a Christian, but in his understanding of the faith he is a heretic and perverse"), while on the contrary the "churchman" is not called simply "Christian" but also "catholic": "fidei
credulitate et professione nominis christianlls est et catholicus" ("by belief in the faith and profession of the name he is a Christian and a Catholic"). "Churchman" and "catholic" are identified and the one explains the other. The "heretic" fighting against the "churchman" is fighting the "catholic," as once, the Egyptian who was an Israelite only on his mother's side fought against the true Israelite: "adversus ecclesiasticum, adversus catholicum litigat.""5 This identification of "churchman" with "catholic" is a characteristic mark of the way the term "Catholic Church" is now used to indicate "ecclesial
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communion" n ot only in faith, but also in the Divine Eucharist. As is shown by a later text w hich, however, reflects an earlier state of affairs, in order for strangers to gain entry into a paroikia, it was not enough to ask them whether they were "believers"; they also had to be asked whether they were "churchmen" 256 m eaning in regular communion with the Catholic Church. A typical example of the connection between Eucharist a nd orthodoxy at the beginning of the third century is the Greek text in the Toura papyrus, of great interest for the history of dogma and liturgy, entitled "Discourses of Origen to Heracleides and the Bishops with him [on the Father and the Son and the Soul], published in 1949 by J. Scherer. 257 This is the major part of the Acts of an episcopal council including the discu ssion between Origen a nd a certain Bishop, Heracleides, whose ideas had precipita ted the calling of the council. Wha t is of importance for us here is that in the course • of the discu ssion about the Son's relationship to the Fa ther, Origen refers to the eucharistic prayer in order to stress that the content of prayer and the content of faith should be in total harmon y. The relationship of the Son to the Father is one of unity in nature in a distinction of persons, and he nce "the offering [of the Eucharist] is to God Almighty through Jesus Christ as He who offers [or is offering258 ] His divinity to the Father; not twice, but let the offering be to God from God ... " (2.24; loc. cit. p. 62). Thus the orthodox faith and the eucharistic offering, which most likely occasioned discussion, are mutually dependent, a nd the unity of the Church depends on the harmony between the two in such a way that whoever disagrees, be he a Bish op or a presbyter, "is not a Bishop nor a presbyter nor a layman. If he is a deacon, he is not a deacon n or a layman. If he is a layman, he is not a lay man, n or does he come together" (synagetai, i.e. take part in the eucharistic synaxis) (5.5; loc. cit. p. 64). The way the consciousness of the Church's catholicity was shaped by the now decisive joining of e ucharistic communion with orthodoxy is clearly illustrated by the m a nner in which the Church in the period unde r discussion accounted
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for the institution of the episcopate. Earlier, as we have seen, the institution of e piscopacy was connected in the beginning chiefly with the Divine Eucharist (Clement of Rome, Ignatius) . and, later on, chiefly and emphatically with its teaching function (Martyrdom of Polycarp, Hegesippus, Iren aeu s). At the beginning of the third century, these two elements are joined into one, and the Bishop is clearly the expression of both simultaneously. This is illustrated in the Apostolic Tradition of Hippolytus,259 a text of great value for the history of this p eriod. A careful examination of the evidence this text g ives concerning the Bishop tells us that the Bishop, who was alter Christlls a nd alter apostolus for his Church,"'" con centra tes in himself the power both to "shepherd the flock" of his Church, that is to teach her m embers with authority, and to "offer to Thee the gifts of Thy h oly Church," that is to perform the Divine Euch arist.'61 Thus, around the beginning of the third century and und er pressure from heresy; which already showed a tendency to clothe itself in ecc1esial garb, unity in the Divine Eucharist is combined with unity in o rthodoxy while the Bishop through his ordination is clearly made the successor of the Apostles both in the offering of the Eucharist and in the preservation of orthodoxy. In the sam e way, this period sees a synthesis of the elements which earlier expressed the notion of the "Catholic Church." This synthesis is expanded and matures still further in the time of Cyprian and under pressure from a nother negative factor, that of schism. 2. "Schism " occurs as a term even in the earliest texts of the New Testament, but the m eaning it has there is simply that of a temporary disagreem ent262 or of quarrels between individuals, not between organized groupS.'63 Later "schism " is confused with "heresy," in place of which it is often used , and this e nded finally in the definition of heresy as wrong belief, a nd schism as a divisio n o f a n adminstrative or moral kind.'64 U nder pressure from schism , w hich was a most acute problem in the third century, the consciousness concerning the Church' s catholicity was clarified still furthe r. This clari-
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fica tion was passed down to history m ainly through the p ersona lity of 5 t Cyprian w ho for this reaso n represents a milesto ne in the history of the unity of the Church . Continuing the tradition and mind of the Church of the time of Hippolytus and Origen, the Church of Cyprian's time inherited the consciousness that her catholicity consisted in uni ty in right faith and sacram ental communion, expressed through the Bishop of each local Church . Bu t going beyond w hat it had inherited, Cyprian's genera tion further clarified the components of this catholicity both for itself and for history in gen e r a l, becaus e tha nks to Cypria n a nd the controversies of his time, the history of ecclesiology in this period can be studied easily. Thus we receive on the one hand an a lmost complete d escription of the composition and organization of the local Church, and on the other, a clarification and an ecclesiological expression of the catholicity of each local• Church . The local Church comprises two basic components bound together in comp lete unity and order: the p eople (plebs) and the clergy (ordo or clerus) .'65 The clergy consists of various degrees. Among the laity, by contrast, there are no d egrees.'66 Within the clergy, w e find clearly d istingu ished the three hiera tic degrees (bishop, presbyter, deacon ) and also the lower clergy'" w ith the responsibilities of each d efined. All are dep endent on the Bishop and ow e obedience to him. In his absence, both the clergy and the deacons can be given a m an da te to represent him in his respo nsibilities and his w ork.'68 When he is present, however, they may only be in obedience to him.'69 The laity similarly owes obedience to the clergy and in particular to the Bishop . This obedience does not preclude their participation in church affairs m ainly in the fOl In of giving an opinion on serious issu es'" and electing clergy.'" But as in antiquity (1 Clem ent - Igna tius), this participa tion was approbatory in character and not by way of a precondition: w hile from the other clergy the Bishop seeks consilium (advice), from the laity he m erely seeks consensus (consent).'" These are two d ifferent things.'" It is possible for the rest of the clergy and the laity to p articipate
in the election of a Bishop, but the election d epends on and receives its validity from the participation of the Bisho ps.2,. All this is a consequence of the ancient consciou sness that the catholicity of the local Church is expressed by the Bishop. It is he that incarnates the local Church (as we have already seen in Ignatius).'75 When, therefore, Cyprian w rites to a particular Church, he addresses her Bishop alo ne (Cyprian us Comelio fratri , Cyprianus Jubaial10 fratri, etc.). If the episcopal throne is vacant, he addresses the clergy (Cyprianus presbyteris et diaconis Romae consistentibus). O nly when he is addressing his own Church, because of course he is not addressing her entirety, d oes he write to her clergy and laity (Cyprianus presbyteris et plebi universae). Cyprian gives an ecclesiological explanation of this position of his. For him it is a fundamental and inviolable principle that the Church has been founded upo n the Bishop:'76 for the Church is nothing other than the people united around their Bishop and the flock bound to their shepherd (Ecclesia'plebs sacerdoti aduna ta et pastori suo grex adhaerens). The Bishop is in the Church and the Church in the Bisho p, and if anyone is no t with the Bisho p, he is not in the Church .277 Whoever separates himself from the Bishop, sep arates himself from the Church.'" Su ch are the essential and inviolable ecclesiological principles of Cyprian's time. One might reiterate here that this period presen ted nothing essentially new from the viewpoint of ecclesiology. This can be seen from a careful examination of what has been said up to this point. But as h as been done, hitherto, in the course of o ur investigation, so now, too, we have to compare the period we are looking at with·earlier times and establish w hat shifts of emphasis or interpretations ecclesiology may have undergone in the consciousness of the C hurch . In the present case, historical conditions contributed to the following developments w hich w ere highly significan t an d of decisive importance. The schism occasioned by the "lapsed" w hich rocked the Church of Cyprian's time, and w hich arose after only the first year of Cyprian's ep iscopate (249 AD - persecution of Decius), had brought up for discu ssion the problem of the
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jurisdiction of the Bishop of each local Church, and the relationship of this jurisdiction to the authority of the martyrs (another form of the very ancient problem of the relationship between the charismatics and the permanent ministers). The problem had been posed in the form of the question: did the martyrs have the right and the authority, o n the basis of their sacrifices for the faith, to pardon those who had lapsed, releasing them from the penance imposed by the Church? The right to pardon those who were in a state of penance belonged to the Bishop. There was a belief in some circles that the martyrs had within them the Holy Spirit who had strengthened them in the hour of martyrdom.'" As Spiritbearers, then, did they not ha ve the authority to act at least as the Bishop did? The answer from Cyprian and the other Western Bishops was negative. Only in the case of those on their deathbeds could the lapsed be given such pardon by economy (and anyway this presupposed the knowledge and • approval of the Bishop). Others were obliged to await the return of the Bishop to his see. Yet again, the "Catholic Church" showed a consciousness that her unity and catholicity rested on the Bishop. It should be noted that this took place before the schism of Novatus which Harnack makes the ground and starting-point for Cyprian's conviction that "ecclesia super episcopos constituatllr" [" the Church is founded on the bishops"] .28o This is evidence that Harnack is wrong because the above-mentioned decision b y Cyprian and the other Western Bishops came before Novatus, and reflects very ancient beliefs which we have already looked at. This, then, was the first historical event of Cyprian's time which led to the clarification of episcopocentric catholicity281 After Cyprian's stance against the martyrs pardoning those who had lapsed, there followed the schism of Felicissimus around whom a part of the laity ("portio plebis") had gathered . Such a group of Christians living apart from the Bishop was not even called a Church by Cyprian. When the lapsed sent him a letter "in the name of the Church" ("ecclesiae nomine"), Cyprian described them as impudent for wanting to call themselves a "Church" (" ecclesiam se volunt
esse ..."). There was a strong consciousness that the Catholic
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Church could not be found outside the Bishop. But in the meanwhile and before Felicissimus was condemned and unity in Carthage restored (251 AD - Council of Carthage), Rome was faced with the Novatianist schism in which Novatus, a presbyter from Carthage belonging to the faction of Felicissimus, took part, having an interest in seeing Novatian made Bishop of Rome, since the latter would support Felicissimus' faction. The election of Cornelius as Bishop of Rome was supported without hesitation by Cyprian, and this contributed to the further clarification of his ecclesiology through letters and through his work De catholicae ecclesiae unitate. The notion of catholicity is used repeatedly by Cyprian: the election of Novatian took place "contra ecclesiam catholicam"282 (again, the Church of Rome is meant, and not the universal Church). The "Catholic Church" in Rome was not that with Novatian, but that with Cornelius, from which those with Novatian had detached themselves.283 Writing to the confessors of Rome, who supported Novatian, he reminds them that confession during persecutions is not a sufficient duty for the Christian, and that devotion to the unity of the Catholic Church and her Bishop is an equally serious duty. By electing a Bishop over against the existing Bishop, the confessors had acted contrary to the catholicity of the Church ("contrary to the unity of the Catholic institution, they plotted to make another bishop"), and in this way had tried to found another Church, outside that which the Lord had founded - "something that is neither lawful nor permissible to do."'" For the Catholic Church founded by the Lord is one, and h er unity res ts on the unity of the episcopate ("episcopatus unus est").'" Thus, in a way reminiscent of Ignatius, the Bishop, the Catholic C hurch, C hrist and God form an unbreakable sequence. Cyprian, therefore, has no difficulty in drawing the conclusion: whoever does not have the C hurch as his mother canno t have God as his Father
("habere non palest Deum patrem qui ecclesiam non habet matrem"). And he who is not with the Church is not with Christ ("He who gathers eleswhere than in the Church, scat-
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ters the Church of Christ")"'" just as he who is not w ith the Bishop is not with the Church"7 and in consequence is with neither Christ nor God . What understanding of the Catholic Church underlies these convictions? This is elucidated for us by (a) the work De catholicae ecclesiae unitale, and (b) the texts written in response to the events w hich took place towards the end of Cyprian's life. According to the De Unitate, the Catholic Church is that which concentra tes in herself of all the means of salvation. The emphasis is not placed only on her orthod oxy or only on the celebration of the Divine Eu charist or simply on these two as happened in the times before Cyprian. The consciousness concerning catholicity had now matured considerably, and under pressure of historical events, it reached the fullness of its expression. The Ca tholic Church is tha t w hich incarnates orthod oxy, the Divine Eu charist and every other means of salvation, every sacrament: Priesthood and Baptism . These will be d eveloped more clearly towards the end of Cyprian's life in response to the controversies over baptism. Bu t they are already expressed in principle and in a negative way in De Unitate: outside the Catholic Church there is no baptism ("non abluntur illic homines"), nor Eucharist ("falsa sacrificia"), nor Bishop ("episcopi nomen") nor indeed a "cathedra" of right teaching." 8 Can someone maintain that he has a right faith, asks Cyprian, if he is not connected with the cathedra of Peter which is occupied by the Bishop in each loca l Church?289 Faith and orthod oxy for Cyprian are ecclesiological concepts: right faith can not form a selfsufficicient means to salvation, but is a component in the believer's more general d edication to the Catholic Church. He clarifies these principles still further w hen, around the year 255, the issue arises of the valid ity of baptism by heretics. This issue first appears in a letter of Cyprian's to a certaih distinguished layman named Magnus who had asked, at Cyprian's own instigation, whether the Novatianists were able to perform valid baptisms. Cyprian answers in the negative: heretics and schismatics do not have the right and the
power to baptize."o This position of Cyprian's and the way he justifies it reveal much about the then prevailing consciousness as to what exactly constitutes the Catholic Church which is our immediate concern here. Why are heretics and schismatics unable to perform valid bap tisms? For Cyprian there is one answer: because they are outside the Catholic Church. To the question of w hether the Novatianists do not have the same faith as the Catholic Church, he replies in the negative: their Creed is not the same as ours because in our Creed there is a reference to belief in the Church whereas the Novatianists do not have a Church. Similarly there is a reference to remission of sins, but the Nova tianists d o not receive this throu gh the Church.'91 As to faith in the Holy Trinity in the name of Whom they baptize, he asks: did not Korah and Dathan and Abiram have the same faith as Moses, but were punished by God nonetheless?2" This line of argument of Cyprian's bears witness that right faith is not sufficient to constitute the "Catholic Church." Orthodoxy no longer for ms the criterion for the "Catholic Church," but the "Catholic Church" is the criterion for orthodoxy: belief in, the Church forms an essential and necessary element in orthodoxy. The catholicity of the Church, then, is a wider concept than orthodoxy: it includes orthodoxy, without being coextensive with it. What d oes this broader reality consist in? This is the climax of our investigation on this subject. As a result of the baptism issue, Cyprian gives the first full expression in history to the catholicity of the Church. An expression which is, therefore, of decisive importance, summing up the consciousness of previous generations of Christians on trus subject not by adding together various points, but as a flowing and organic w hole. Here is w hat he says. Heretics and schismatics, bein g outside the Ca tholic Church and not obedient to her, do not have the Holy Spirit. Even su p posing, then, tha t they could baptize, they coul9not bestow the Holy Spirit. But this is not enough; for one w ho d oes not have the Holy Spirit cannot even baptize. 293 Baptism forgives sins, and sins are forgiven only by those w ho possess the Holy Sp irit in accordance w ith In 20:22. But
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it is precisely this that those outside the Catholic Church lack: "all of these, heretics and schismatics, do not confer the Holy . ·t."294 Spm What then is the deeper reason for this inability on the part of schismatics and heretics to perform "valid" sacraments? At this point, the unity of the Church comes into play as a factor of decisive importance in the relationship of the Catholic Church to schism and heresy. For Cyprian, just as for Paul and Ignatius (see above), the Eucharist constitutes the sacrament of Church's unity in such a way that the Eucharist acquires ecclesiological content. We see this chiefly in the remarkable letters 63 and 69; the basic ideas in which are characteristic of the whole of Cyprian's ecclesiology. Interpreting the symbolism of the mingling of the water and the wine in the eucharistic Cup, and of the grains of wheat from which the eucharistic Bread is made, he observes that just as Christ bears all of us in Himself so in the mingling of the water and the wine in the cup the multitude of the faithful (populus) are united into one indissoluble unity. Therefore, the Church too, united in the Eucharist, is inseparably united with Christ in such a way that the two become one being. When the holy Cup is consecrated, it is necessary that neither wine alone nor water alone should be offered. For if we offer the water alone, the people appear without Christ. The same goes for the union of the grains of wheat for preparing the bread. Just as the multitude of grains of wheat are collected together and ground together and mixed so as to become one loaf of bread, so also in Christ, who is the heavenly bread, there is but one body in which our multiplicity is joined together and united. Precisely because the Eucharist posseses this ecclesiological content, the schismatics and heretics who do not participate in it cannot perform "valid" sacraments. For Cyprian, this is the basis for the "validity" of the heretics' baptism: if they participated in the unity of the Eucharist, they would participate also in the whole charismatic life of the Church. This understanding, which sets up eucharistic unity as the fullness of ecclesial unity in general, is clearly
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expressed by Cyprian: U Novatian were united in this bread of the Lord, if he were mingled with the others in the people of God, then he could maintain that he possessed the grace of the one baptism, because he would be within the unity of the Church ... How indivisible is the mystery of unity and how hopeless the destruction of those who provoke the wrath of God by creating a schism and making another bishop in place of their own Bishop, is described by Scripture in the Book of IGngs, in connection with the ten tribes who separated themselves from Judah and Benjamin and foresook their king in order to enthrone another.'95 This important passage reveals that for Cyprian who broadens the concept of the catholicity of the Church by making a synthesis of all the elements he had inherited from previous generations that unity in the one Divine Eucharist and the one Bishop296 forms the criterion for the catholicity of the Church. A second Eucharisi and a second Bishop in the same geographical area constitute a situation "outside the Catholic Church." Here too, the supreme mark of remaining within the Catholic Church is unity in the one Eucharist "under the leadership of the Bishop." Such unity describes the bounds of catholicity which in the synthetic exposition given by Cyprian means that living fullness of the body of Christ in which through the sovereignty of the Holy Spirit, doctrinal life (orthodoxy), and sacramental life (Eucharist, Baptism, Priesthood) form mutually dependent elements and an unbreakable unity which defines the boundaries and the substance of the Church. This fullness subsists in each Church which is led by a canonical Bishop. Was this understanding of catholicity Cyprian's consciousness only, or that of the Church in general around the middle of the third century? This is difficult to answer, because at that period there did not yet exist the criterion through which the consciousness of all the Churches around the world could be expressed at the same time, namely, the ecumenical couneil. We do, however, know that many Churches became involved in the discussion about baptism, and this helps us
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to know their views relative to Cyprian's position. First of ail, we note that all the Churches of Africa had sided with Cyprian's views in two Councils, one in the autumn of 255 and one shortly before Easter in 256. Present, at the latter, were 71 Bishops from Africa and Numidia who had endorsed the decisions of the 255 Council. These d ecisions are a precise reflection of Cyprian's views summarizing his teaching on the "Catholic Church" as set out above: the "Catholic Church" is the sphere of operation of the Holy Spirit, and therefore, she alone is able to possess right teaching and sacraments.''' Thus, we can say that what has been said above regarding Cyprian's ecclesiology can be taken by historical research as a reflection of the consciousness of the Churches in Africa and Numidia.'98 What was the understanding of the Churches of the East in this matter? Judging from those that took part in the discussion on baptism, we may say that the eastern Churches wholeheartedly shared the ecclesiological views of Cyprian. Writing to Cyprian (in 256) in the name of the Churches of Cappadocia, Cilicia and Galatia, obviously after a council had been convened there, Firmilian of Caesarea in Cappadocia concurs with Cyprian's ecclesiology without hesitation. Firmilian's letter'" is a notable historical document because it vigorously proclaims the fullness and catholicity of every local Church which has a Bishop at her head,300 and declares tha t the ecclesiological views on catholicity of the Churches he represents are identical with those of Cyprian. 30 ! As for the other eastern Churches, we have indications that the Church of Alexandria, although in practice following Rome, was theoretically in her ecclesiology more in agreement with Cyprian,"" and if we believe Firmilian, the Church of Jerusalem too had many clisagreements with Rome. 303 Anyway, the fact is that throughout the East councils were convened in the autumn of 256 which decided unanimously to follow Cyprian in his ecclesiology.304 It remains to examine the position on this subject of the Church of Rome which in the person of her bishop Stephen was strongly opposed to the views of Cyprian. On what ex-
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actly did Stephen disagree with Cyprian? Our concern here is to see whether and to what extent Rome shared Cyprian's views on the "Catholic Church" which should not be precluded a priori by the great impression made by the controversy between Rome and Africa. Unfortunately, Stephen's arguments are known to us only in part and perhaps in distorted form because they have come down to us through the letters of Cyprian and others of his opponents. We should not, then, give Cyprian's letters the status of an historical source in this matter. Fortunately, however, there is preserved a contemporary work by an anonymous African Bishop entitled De Rebaptismate, written probably around 256,'05 which sets out in detail the arguments against Cyprian's views on baptism. This text expounds not so much the teaching on the Church as that on the sacraments, but it reveals the writer's ecclesiological principles. The writer accepts that there is only one Church outside which the Holy Spirit is not. But he maintains that baptism is performed by Christ at the invocation of His mime. Starting from this premise, this writer holds that when the name of the Lord is invoked, even by those who are outside the Catholic Church, in the course of a baptism, the invocation operates in such a way that the baptism which thus takes place is authentic. Exactly what value su ch a baptism has is not defined by this author. It seems, however, that he too retains many doubts as to its efficacity, since he says that if someone thus baptized outside the Catholic Church dies a schismatic, in other words before he repents and returns to the Catholic Church, his baptism is of no significance for his salvation.3\J6 These views can be taken as those of the Church of Rome and her Bishop Stephen because they come to the conclusion that the rebaptism of those returning to the Catholic Church is not required which is exactly as Stephen of Rome maintained. The point which interests us here, however, is not that of rebaptism, but that of the ecclesiological presuppOSitions behind it. On these both the treatise De Rebaptismate (and Stephen of Rome) and Cyprian seem to be in essential agreement; for both accept that the Holy Spirit is not given
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to those w ho are baptized outside the Catholic Church.'()7 We can in consequence accept that the consciousness of the "Catholic Church" which Cyprian formula ted as a result of the schisms did not differ in essence from that of those who disagreed with him on the issue of baptism. And, therefore, that, insofar, as the sources allow us to know, this consciousness was that of all the Churches of the middle of the third century.
Eucharist under one Bishop. Hence anyone who d oes not participate in this unity and establishes a second Eu charist under a second Bishop within the geographical boundaries of a given Church (the creation of a schism ) is establishing a second Church not only in a canonical sense but also in an essential dogmatic sense. Given, however, that the Church according to Cyprian's basic understanding is one only, any communion in another Eucharist and under another Bishop bears no relation to the body of Christ. To have two or more eucharistic communities under two or more Bishops in each city is una cceptable. Without this presupposition, the "ecclesiology of schism" d eveloped by Cyprian would not be p ossible. Was the problem of sc hism so lved thro ugh this ecclesiology of Cyprian's? From an historical and perhaps a lso from a theological viewpoint, the answer is negative.309 The coincidence between the can onical and essential bound aries of the Church was· not accepted by Stephen of Rome, and was later rejected totally by Augustine. After him, this negative position towards Cyprian's ecclesiology was followed almost unanimously by the West which preferred to make a distinction between the charismatic and canonical spheres of the Church, and to accept the p ossibility that even those who by reason of schism did not participa te in the latter, might participate in the former. The East, apart from a very few exceptions, seems to have followed Cyprian without yet having solved this fundamental problem from either a theological or an historical viewpoint. The final answer as regards history will be given only once the sources after Cyp r ian in b o th East a n d Wes t h ave been examined. Cyprian's position, w hich we have examined here, covers the situation regarding the rela tion of schism to the unity of the Church only in the first three centuries.
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Summarizing the information we have, we observe that the clarification in the Church's consciousness of catholicity, which took place as a result of the acute problem of schism and with the help of the great figure of Cyprian, consisted in the following basic principles: . (a) In contrast to the schisma tic group, the Ca tholic Church possesses the fullness of the bod y of Christ (original meaning of catholicity) which, however, is manifested not simply as unity in the Eucharist or in orthod oxy and in the Bishop, but as fullness and self-sufficiency in every savm g operation of the Holy Spirit expressed through the umty of each Church around the Bishop in whom the Church resIdes
(ecclesia in episcopo). (b ) Schismatics are outside the Church, and in consequence, there can be no question of their participation in the sphere of the body of Christ. H ence, there IS no essentIal dIStinction from an ecclesiological viewpoint between schIsm and heresy. What interests Cyprian is that both are outside the Church. Given that the Church is the on e and only body of Christ, anyone who is outside the Church is outside Christ and outside salvation.308 It is not hard to see that such an "ecclesiology of sch ism" arises out of the ancient identification of the Church with the eucharistic synaxis and the oneness of that synaxis in each Church. A basic presupposition of Cyprian's position is
the coincidence between the canonical boundaries of the Chu rch and her essential boundaries. This coincidence was achieved , as we have seen, through the unity of each Church in one
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3. The Eucharist, the Bishop and the unity of the "Catholic Church throughout the world" We have seen above that the term "Catholic Church" was not identified with the "worldwide Church" in the sources
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of the first three centuries. The connection of the catholicity of the Church with her universality can be seen only from the fourth century onwards although the connection between these two concepts was not formed into a full identification until the time of the Blessed Augustine.'10 In order, however, for this connection to have taken place in the fourth century, the way must certainly have been p repared for it during the first three centuries. We propose to look at this preparation here because of its direct relationship w ith the unity of the Church in the Eucharist and the Bishop. The consciousn ess that all Christians form one Church d espite being scattered "throughout the world" is evident from the first days of the Church. This consciousness should be connected with two basic factors. The first factor is extern al to the Church, and consists in the fac t tha t w hen Christianity first appeared, it was confronted with a widespr~a d "universal" unity - the unity of the oiko umene - the idea of w hich was cultivated by the Greeks of Christ's time.'" During the first three centuries, the Church never lost the consciousness of living w ithin this oikoumene, and her sacred mission, as carried out indeed by the Apostle to the Gentiles, very early revealed her universal spirit.'" The second factor contributing to the unity of Christians all over the world is internal to the Church and consists in the Church 's selfawareness of forming a people, the Israel of God, which is scattered to the ends of the earth. In the same way, there was formed very early the consciousness of a Church of the diaspora, which is clearly expressed in the first Epistle of Peter,313 and which, later, through the sharp differentiation of Christianity from both Judaism and Hellenism, took on the form of characterizing the Church as a third race. The consciousness of the unity of the Church throughout the world was connected early with the Divine Eucharist. We see this in the Didache w hich preserves in the original eucharistic prayers the image of the unity in the Euch arist not only of each Church, but also of the whole "Catholic Church throughout the world" :. "Just as this loa f was scattered all over the mountains and was brought together and
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made one, so let Thy Church be gathered from the ends of the earth in Thy Kingdom ."' 14 It repeats the same prayer a little later (1 0.5) w ith the p etition: " ...and gather her together from the fo ur winds ..." We see this connection of the Eucharist with the consciousness of the unity of Chr istians all over the world also in the Epistle to Diognetus. In this text, the spread of the Church all over the w orld is heavily stressed .' 15 The concept of the Church in this epistle is that of the new Paradise in the midst of which is the tree w hich is Christ, and in which, the faithful are gathered together to p erform the Eucharist under the leadership of the ministers'16 In the second half of the second century and arising out of the Paschal controversies, we are confronted with a particular emphasis on the consciousness tha t the Churches all over the world form a unity.3l' At the same period , and as a result both of these disputes,3lB and of Mon tanism,'19 the first councils of Bishops make their appearance, an event which brings into history once and for all a concrete external criterio n for expressing the unity o f th e Ca tholic Church throughou t the world. It is a notable fact that even a t this period the unity of the Ca tholic Church throughout the world is combined with unity in the Eucharist and in the Bishop . The institution of councils, as it appears during the years we are looking at, has in view in the final analysis nothing other than "communion," i.e. the unity of the Churches in the Eucharist. This is evident from a careful reading of the first text to give us any information about councils: "The faithful in Asia came together often and in many parts of Asia to consider this subject, and examined the novel utterances and declared them profane and rejected the heresy; thus [the heretics] were expelled from the Church and debarred from communion."320 But the Paschal disputes too were closely bound up with unity in the Eucharist: "Victor, who presided over the Church of the Romans, immediately tried to cu t off from the common union as heterod ox all the paroikies of Asia with the Churches bord ering them, and publicized this through letters, proclaiming all the brethren there totally excommunicate."'21 From
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this passage, it becomes obvious that the supreme expression of the "common union," i,e, of the unity of the Church throughout the world, lies in the communion of the Eucharist. Thus, Irenaeus, writing to Victor of Rome on the same subject, uses as his principle argument the fact that the bishops of Rome prio r to Victor "sent the Eucharist" to "those w ho did not observe" the same manner of celebrating Easter as Rome did, On the universal level too, this unity in the Eu charist was a unity through the Bishop, This was shown in various ways, The communication of members of one C hurch travelling to another required them to be provided with a special letter from the Bishop confirming their p osition in their own Church322 to the end that they should be received into eucharistic communion, This is shown even more characteristically in the practice, which appears also in the canonical sources, whereby each Bishop "conced es" the Eucharist to the Bishop of another Church who is visiting him : We know that this took place in Rome when Polycarp went there to deal with the question of Eastei'23 w hile the Syriac Didascalia around the beginning of the third century presents it as a nOimal practice at least in that area.''' In this way, it was demonstrated in the most graphic manner that there was essentially one Eucharist and one episcopate in the whole world, Thus, the differences over the manner of performing the Eucharist were very few and of secondary importance while the basic structure of the Eucharist was amazingly the same in all geographical regions, as we see from a comparison between the outline of the liturgy in Justin's First Apology and the eastern liturgies of the fourth century, The fact that the Eucharist in Rome could be perform ed with no difficulty by Polycarp from Ephesus, and the evid ence of Egeria's account of her travels in Jerusalem and elsewhere, together with that of Abercius of Hierapolis w ho travelled through almost all the then known world, finding everywhere the same "infinitely great and pure fish from
the spring, whom a pure virgin cau ght and gave to His friends to eat forever, having a mixed w ine that is good and giving it with the bread,"32' But if, as appears from the above, there was but one Church in all the world according the consciousness of unity in the first three centuries, how is the existence of many fu ll and Catholic Churches around the world to be understood? How, in other words, could the Christians of those days conceive of the one "Catholic Church throughout the world" despite the multiplicity of Churches in various places especially w hen they regarded the latter as fu ll Churches? Here we come up against the most fun damental problem of all, This is the problem of how the Catholic Churches in various places relate to the Catholic Church throughout the world in the conscio usn ess of the Church of the first three centuries, On this question, the existing sources permit the following observations, If the information in the sources is examined carefully, it shows that the strong unity among· Christians all over the world was necessarily m anifested through the local Church, No Christian believer could participate in the unity of the Church throughout the world if he did not first belong to the unity of a particular local Church, This raises the fundamental problem o f the re lations hip that ex is ted, both ecclesiologically and canonically, between the unity of the local C hurch and that of the Church throughout the world, What has already been written about the catholicity of the local Church precludes an understanding of the Catholic Church throughout the world as a unity of parts complementing each other, given that each local Church, having her own Bishop as a genuine su ccessor to the Apostles both in the leadership of the one Eucharist and in orthodox faith, was a fu ll and complete Church which had no need of any complem ent. In this case, how are we to understand the unity of the particular Churches in the one Catholic Church throughout the world? Already from the beginning of the second century, as Ignatius testifies, there was the consciousness that "the Bish-
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*Trans. note: i.e. he allows the visiting bishop to take his place as celebrant.
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opS who are at the ends of the earth are in the mind (gnome) of Jesus Christ."326 This is of particular importance for the unity
on the positive side, the only principle governing Cyprian's theology of the unity of the local Churches is that of the unity of the episcopate: "episcopatus unus est."330 This means that each of the Bishops participates in the same episcopate, not as a part of a whole, but as an expression of the whole. Hence the full equality of the Bishops all over the world forms a fundamental ecclesiological axiom for this Father too. It is not only all the Bishops together, but also each one of the Bishops who is the successor of all the Apostles. 331 The unity of all these Bishops and of the Churches under them in the one Catholic Church throughout the world is described by Cyprian with the term unanimitas.'32 This shared consciousness and unanimity is ascertained through all the communication between the Bishops but in a quite special way through the Councils. In this way, the unity of the Bishops in different places is not a unity by addition as in a modern democracy but a unity of identity. 5t Cyprian underlines this more than clearly when he writes to Antoninus (Epist. 52): "Hence also the unity of the Bishops, who, though they are many, form a unity through the identity of their minds." In consequence, it is only as a unity in identity that the unity of the episcopate according to Cyprian can rightly be expressed. The concept of unity in identity is the underlying basis for the consciousness of universality in all the Churches during the first three centuries. This was the spirit behind both the insistent rejections of any intervention by Rome in the Churches of Asia in the second century about which we have spoken already and the institution of Councils itself. In Irenaeus' famous passage about tradition,'33 the dominant idea is that of the identity of faith: the Church scattered throughout the world is one in faith and speaks with one voice because there is an identity of all the local Churches confirmed by the identity of mind of their Bishops.'" For Tertullian, similarly, the unity of the Catholic Church around the world is nothing other than the coincidence and identity of the Churches in different places with the content and life of the first apostolic Church; an identity which makes each one of the Churches fully apostolic and catholic: "For this reason,"
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of the Church throughout the world and the expression of this unity through the institution of councils.'27 But if this is placed in the light of Ignatius' ecclesiology, according to which, as we have seen, the whole Christ is revealed in the unity of each Church, the unity of the Bishops who are at the ends of the earth can mean nothing other than mystical identity: given that according to Ignatius' ecclesiology the Church under each Bishop is united and presented in him as the body of Christ, then all the Bishops, coinciding in the same center, are "in Jesus Christ." Universal unity, therefore, consists not in a mutual complementarity of parts or in a democratic "majority" but in the coincidence of the local Churches with each other in the same place, i.e. "in the gnome of Jesus Christ." A similar understanding of the unity of the Churches throughout the world in one Church is also expressed by 5t CyprIan. In agreement with the entire tradition before him, he regards the Bishop, as we have seen, as the center of the Church's unity as the one on whom the Church is based. How does he view the unity of the "Bishops who are at the ends of the earth," however? Here we should observe, with E. Mersch,32' that it is not possible to find in Cyprian any external criterion for the unity of the local Churches. While he keeps on talking about the unity within each Church, especially in the De Catholicae Ecclesiae Unitate, he does not by any means speak clearly about the unity of all the Churches in various places. It is mainly negative conclusions on this subject that can be drawn from a careful examination of his works. Thus is it perfectly clear that, despite his recognition of the primacy of Peter, he does not recognize in any of the Bishops the right to express the unity of all the Bishops. This is demonstrated, besides, by his constant struggles against Rome's view on baptism. If the texts in his works which have provoked so much discussion 32' had even the slightest sense of acknowledging in the Roman Church the property of expressing the unity of all the Churches throughout the world, these struggles of Cyprian's would be inexplicable. Besides,
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he writes, "these C hurches (i,e, those scattered around the world), however numerous and large they may be, are nothing other tha t the original apostolic Church herself, from which they all originated, They are all original, all apostolic, because they all confirm their complete unity" , No other law governs them but the one tradition of the same mystenj."335 This doctrine of Tertullian's not only excludes the primacy of any Church, since all the Churches without exception are equally apostolic and full Churches,'" but it also implies the same concept of unity that we find in Irenaeus: the identity of each Church with the tradition of the same mystery forms the only law governing the relationship of mutual unity of the Churches all over the world in the one catholic and apostolic C hurch, In this, precisely, lies the importance of the institution of Councils,''' at which the "Bishops who are a t the ends of the earth" would come together, insofar as they could, and make sure that they were all "in the mind of Jesu s Christ," In the case where full identity could not be established , unity would be in jeopa rdy, and might be broken up by the exclusion of certain Churches from "communion,"'" In this way, the catholicity of each Church was not diminished but confirmed, insofar as she too was "in the mind of Jesus Christ." Such a consciousness of unin) in identity among the Churches in different places was understood as a meeting of all the Churches
Jesus Christ" ? What criterion was used to establish that the local Churches were united in the one "Catholic Church throughout the world"? This leads u s to examine the d eeper meaning of the catholicity of the Church which appears in the sources of the first three centuries as having the following three dimensions, First of all, the chronological or historical coincidence of the local Churches with the past, and in particular w ith the original apostolic C hurch, was regarded as indispensable, This element of reference back through histon) was so strong in the Church's consciousness during the first three centuries that the terms one Church and ancient Church are linked together and interpret each other,"" For Hegesippus, this historical reference back to the original Church, and the identity of each Church with this original Church, was the strongest argument against heresies 3 41 For Tertullian, each local Church is fully apostolic and catholic precisely because she is none other than "the primitive apostolic C hurch herself,"3'" It is not without significance, then, that all the ancient Councils, induding indeed the Ecumenical Councils, grounded their decisions in what the Scriptures and the Fathers had in the past expressed as the fa ith of the Church, A second point seen as indispensable was the spatial or geographical verification of the identity of the Churches in the same faith and life "in the mind of Jesus Christ." This meant that in order to be "catholic" each Church had to be identified with the other Churches and live in full communion with them, The necessity for this verification led to the appearance and establishment of the institution of Councils, The ultimate import of which during the first three centuries is revealed in the light of Ignatius' phrase: "the Bishops who are at the ends of the earth are in the mind of Jesus Christ."343 But this element of geographical or spatial catholicity was not in itself sufficient for the unity of the "Catholic Church throughout the world," Its importance was absolutely dependent on the existence of the first criterion, i.e, that of going back chronologically and historically to the primitive Church, and the verification through this of the iilentity of each
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in different places at the same center: "in the mind of Jesus Chris!." Hence if in conclusion the question is posed as to what is the center of unity among the Churches throughout the world, the entire consciousness of the Church of the first three centuries would reject the idea of anyone Bishop individually forming such a center339 The only center of such unity for the Church of that period was Jesus Christ. The Catholic Church throughout the world knew no other center of her unity. The coincidence and identity of the local Churches with this center formed the expression of their unity in the one Church, expressed through communion in the one Eucharist, from w hich Churches not identified with this center were cut off, But how was it made certain that the Churches were identical with each other in the same center, i.e, in the "mind of
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Church with the original apostolic Church, Thus, supposing that the majority of the Churches coincided with each other but did not coincide with the original apostolic Church, then the opinion of the "majority" would have no force.''' This meant that the "Ca tholic C hurch throughout the world," united through the Councils, d id not form a unity by addition in which "catholic" would coincide with "majority," but a qualitative and organic unity in which what was "catholic" was identified with what was "true" and "original" as this appeared in the firs t apostolic Church, Yet both the geographical or latitudinal dimension of the "Catholic Church" and the chronological or retrospective referral and connection with her original state of being remained unable to verify the identity of the Churches in the "mind of Jesus Christ" without a third component of catholicity, the charismatic or sacramental. It should be noted that both the reference back to the historical m emory of the , Church and the meeting of the Churches around the world in the same place (epi to auto) took place in the person of the Bishop, Thus, the reference of the Churches to the past was effected by drawing up lists of Bishops from which it was evident tha t each Church went back without a break to the Apostles while the m eeting of the local Churches in the same place was effected through episcopal Councils, This event was not coincidental, but should be connected with the notion, clearly expressed by Irenaeus, that the truth of the Church is unbreakably bound up with the charism of the Priesthood, and is therefore preserved by the Bishops "who with the succession of the episcopate have received the certain charisma of truth, according to the goodwill of the Father,"[qui cum
local Churches in the one "Catholic Church throughout the world" unders tood as their identity with the one whole Christ, was expressed in history: a) as a vertical relationship of each Church with the one and whole Christ mystically present in the one Eucharist, to which the Bishop was connected as the visible head, possessing the "charism of truth"; b) as a historical reference back to the past and the full identity of each Church with the primitive apostolic Church; and c) as a latitudinal extension of each Church to the inclusion and communion of the C hurches everywhere on earth, if and insofar as the first two conditions held good for them , This tripartite identification of the Churches with each other and with the whole Christ was the ultimate and essential arbiter of the "common union of the Churches" through which the one, holy, catholic and apostolic Church was preserved and expressed,347
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episcopatus successione charisma verita tis certum secundum placitum patris acceperuntj 345 But in this way the catholicity of the Church was organically and unbreakably bound up, in the ultimate analysis, with the unity of the Eucharist given that the "charisma" of the Priesthood'" was bestowed only within the Eucharist. These observations lead us to the conclusion tha t according to the sources of the first three centuries, the unity of the
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Summarizing the conclusions of Part Two, we may make the following observa tions: The identification of the Divine Eucharist with the Church of God which is in a particular place, which as we saw in Part One was firmly established in the consciousness of the early Church, entailed maintaining one eucharistic synaxis "under the leadership of the Bishop" in each Church , From historical research into the sources, we have established that Igna tius' exhortation to maintain one Eucharist under one Bishop at one altar corresponded to an historical state of affairs, It was thus established that there was in fact only one synaxis to perform the Eucharist and one Bishop in each C hurch , This fact was not altered by the existence of "household" churches because, as has been established, there was not more than one such Church in each city (so that the househ old Church was "the whole Church" according to Paul), nor by the spread of C hristianity into the countryside given that at the beginning and up to the middle of the second century the Christians from the countryside came together into the Church of the nearest city, and later they formed
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Church es of th e ir o wn with th e ir ow n Bi s h ops, the chorepiscopi, who were initially full Bishop s. This principle of one Bish op presiding over the one Eucha rist in each Church held good for all geographical areas, and the d oubts about it implied at certain points of Eusebius' Ecclesiastical History have been proved by our research here to be groundless. . Su~ a unity of the whole Church of God in a certain place m the o~e Euchanst under the lead ership of the Bishop" had a d ecIsive effect on the formation of the Catholic Church during the crucial p eriod of the firs t three centuries. Thus initially and at the very first appearance of the term "Catholic Church," unity in the Divine Eu charist and in the Bishop was tha t historical reality which expressed in the fullest way the meaning of the catholicity which was gradually entering the Church 's consciou sness. The A p ostle Pa ul's "whole Ch';lrch," identified with the one Church of each place united m the Dlvm e Eucharis t, becam e St Irenae us' "Ca tholic Church" which, as we have established , had no other m eaning than th~ fullness and wholeness a nd identity of the bod y of Chnst as this was realized and revealed in the one Eu charist under the one Bishop in which the "multitude" was united . Later, w hen around the middle of the second century hereSies and schisms formed themselves into organized groups "outside the Church" but tending to the cloak themselves in the external marks of the Church, the emphasis in the "Catholic Church" was placed on orthod oxy a nd on the pure preservation of the apostolic preaching without this m eaning that unity in the Divine Eucharist and in the Bishop ceased to be the main factor differentiating the Catholic Church from the heresies and schisms. The Eucharist was "in agreem ent" with orthodoxy and orthod oxy in agreem ent with the Eucharis t (Irenaeus), while the Bishop was shown to be the successor of the Apostles both in the Eucharist and in orthodoxy (Hippolytus), preserving through the "charism of truth" (Irenaeus) w hich he had received at his ordination, performed exclusively during the Eucharist (Hippolytus), the identity of the faith and also the fullness of the Church (Cyprian ).
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Thus each Church, united in her Bishop who had been thus app ointed , was a full Church identified with the whole body ofChrist,J48 w hence also the term "Catholic Church" was used during the firs t three centuries primarily and chiefly, as we have seen, of each such Church, and indeed in such a way that it could be d eclared that "there should be one Bishop in the Ca tholic Church." This catholicity of each episcopa l Church does not m ake her ecclesiologically and historically independent of the other Churches around the world. The consciousness w hich early app eared concerning the "Catholic Church throughout the world" (Mart. Polye.) meant that althou gh there were Churches around the world nevertheless there was in essence but one Church. This one Church throughou t the world was not a sum total of parts, for, as we have seen, each Church in particular was the w hole Church, and this for reasons connected not with the geographical extent of the Church but with her nature w hich is revealed especially in the one bod y of the one Eucharist. This one Church throughout the world was manifested in history as a unity not of parts but of fu ll circles obliged to be essentially identified with one another. This unity in identity was m anifested in time through identity with w hat the Lord and the Apostles taugh t (ap ostolic succession of bishop s) and in space throu gh identity with w ha t the other Churches around the world lived and taught (institution of councils) while the absence of this identity automatically meant the creation of a schism. The ultimate form of expression of such a Church throughout the world was unity in t he Divine Eu charist and in the Bishop . "Communion" was the ultimate link in the "common union" (Eu sebius), w hile each Eucharist was offered for the one, holy, catholic and apostolic Church from one end of the earth to the other, each Bishop being able to "concede" the Eu charist to the Bishop of another Church (Anicetus of Rome to Polycarp) and each believer able to partake in the Eucharist of another Church with the introd uction and permission of his own Bishop. In this way, the unity of the faithful around the world was nothing other than a unity through the
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Bishop and the Church to which each belonged. The living cell of church unity was the o ne Eucharis t under the leadership of the Bishop and the "Catholic Church" expressed therein. It was only throug h the life of this cell that each Christian lived and all Christians together in all corners of the world w ho make up the one Catholic Church. Through this consciousn ess of unity, the C hurch o f the fir s t three centuries recognized the Lord Jesus Christ as the aile center of the unity of the Catholic Ch urch throughout the world. It was with Him that the "Bishops who are at the ends of the earth" had to be iden tified, and Him that each Bis h o p mys tically and truly personified, in a full and catholic m a nner, as he presided over the Divine Eucharist through which the Church of God was revealed in each p lace. NOTES TO P ART TWO ,
Ignatius, Phi/ad. 4. , See above, p. 66f. J Ignatius, Smyrn. 8:1. ' Ignatius, Magn. 11 :1. Cf. also Tral. 8:1, "Not because I know of anything of the sort among you; but since you are dear to me I put you on your guard, knowing the wiles of the devil." 5 The term apodiylismos (Lat. abstractio) does not mean division into groups, but disintegra tion or divisions of an indiv idualistic nature, as in 1 Corinthians ("I am of Paul," etc.) Cf. also the "passers by," or isolated people, in Ignatius Eph. 9:1 and Rom. 9:3. ' Ignatius, Philad. 3:1. This should have been taken into account by W. Bauer (Rechtglaubigkeit ul1d Ketzerei im altesten Christentllm, 1964', p. 67) who wrongly regards what Ignatius says about unity as a mere wish on the part of the apostolic Father and talks about an "Ignatian faction" (lgnatiusgruppe) in order to support his theories about the preexistence and prevalence of heresy in the early Church which are otherwise proved groundless. 7 See above, p. 50f. 8 Thus e.g L. Cerfaux, La Tll/!ologie de l'Eglise, p. 145: "As the Christians did not always gather as a full assembly but formed separate groups wi thin the same city which gathered less offiCially in private houses, we intend to speak of domestic churches." The 1
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same view is also expressed by P. BatHfol, op. cit. p. 88; H . Leclercq, in D.A.C.L. IV /2,1921, col. 2280; J. Jungmann, The Early Liturgy, p . 13; E.A. Judge, op. cit. p. 37 and P. Trembelas, "Worship in Apostolic Times" (in Greek) (Ioc. cit.). V. Stephanidis (op. cit. p. 34) goes so far as to assert that the household Churches were so numerous within the local Churches that they became centers of heretical teaching and that was why they were finally done away with. From what sources Stephanidis derived this information, we do not know. But these are representati ve examples of the w idespread view that there were many household Churches within a local Church. This idea formed the basis for the view of Protestant historiography that the Church grew grad ually into catholicity; on this view, before 1 Clement, there was a variety of gatherings which is still preserved in the Didache while through 1 Clement and Ignatius we arrive at one assembly under the Bishop in place of several assemblies with corresponding implicatio ns for the elevation of the Bishop. See e.g. P. Carrington, The Early Christian Chu rch, 1,1957, p . 476. For earlier scholars see G. Konidaris, "New Research Towards Solving the Problems of the Sources of Early Christianity," in E.E.TIz.5. (1957-58), 1959, p. 232. The question which is raised and addressed for the first time here, namely whether there was more than one "household church" in each city, is consequently of tremendous importance for the formation of the Catholic Church. 9 This is another indication of the clear distinction between the notions of the "Christian famil y" and the Church, discussed above. 10 Aquila and Priscilla were Christians before they moved to Corinth. Cf. Harnack, "Probabilia liber die Adresse und den Verfasser des Hebraerbriefs" in Z.N.T. W. 1 (1900), 16 f. Their move to Corinth was probably due to Claudius' edict expelling the Jews from Rome. Cf. EE Bruce, "Christianity under Claudius," in Bulletin of the John Rylands Library 44 (1962),310. The story of these two people, as far as it can be reconstructed on the basis of Acts, Romans and 1 Corinthians, reveals their importance for the Pauline Churches. Both were linked w ith a Church "in their household" both in Ephesus (1 Cor. 16:20) and in Rome (Rom. 16:4). This may suggest that the "Church in the household" was usually linked with prominent people. H See L. Cerfaux, La Theologie, p. 145, who accepts this, even though it is essentially incompatible with his view tha t the "household church" was a semi-official Church within the local Church. 12 See above, p. 48f. IJ 1 'b'd 1 .
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Notes to Pa rt Two
The significance of the expression "the w ho le church" (hole he ekklesia) for the origin of the term "catholic church" will be discussed below. 15 This does not preclude the possibility that the Christians moved from one house to another as they would o ften have had to
Cf. Noele Maurice - Denis Boulet, "Titres Urbains et Communaute," in La Maisoll-Dieu, No. 36, 1953, p . 14ff. In Alexandria, too, it seems that around the end of the third century the first Christian church building was established in honour of St Theonas. See Ch . Papadopoulos, History of the Ch ll rch of Alexalldria (in Greek), 1935, p.488. " I Clem. 41:2: "It is not in every place, brethren, that the daily sacrifices are offered, or the prayers, or the sin-offerings, or the trespass-offerings, but in Jerusa lem o nly. And even there they are not offered in every place, but only at the altar before the temple, once the offering has been carefully exa mined by the high priest and the ministers already mentioned. Those, therefore, who do anything contrary to the duty imposed by his will, are punished with d eath." 27 Ignatius, Philad. 4. Cf. Ignatius, Eph. 20:2, and p . 91 above. 28 "I live above one Martinus, at the Timo tinian Baths; and during this time (I am now in Rome for the second time) I am unaware of any meeting of the Christians other than his" (Ma rtyrdom, Ch. II; P.G. 6:1568). " Justin, 1 Apol. 67. Cf. also 65. 30 The Rome of the second half ofthe second century was a meeting place of many nationalities and of Christians from different parts of the empire. See G. La Piana, "Foreign Groups in Rome during the First Centuries of the Empire," in The Harvard Theological Review (1927), 183. 31 E.g. in the matter of accepting the term "episkopos." See G. Konidaris, op.cit. pp. 55-56. 32 It should be seen as highly Significant that the Bishop initially went under the title "presiding presbyter" (proestos presbyteros) (see G. Konidaris, "Warum die Urkirche von Antioch ia den "proestota presbyteron" der Ortsgemeinde als "ho Episkopos" bezeichnete," in Miillchel1er Theologische Zeitschrift, 1961, pp. 269-84). This means that the institution of the Bishop was par excellence liturgical, and the whole of his authority stemmed from his position in the Eucharist. Because as Justin attests (] Apol. 65 and 67), the term proestos ("presiden Y') was used to indicate the one who offered the Eucharist. Harnack (Mission tllld Ausbreitung des Christentums in den drei erstell Jahrhul1derten , II', pp. 836, 84H.) talks about many places of worship and indeed parishes very early on, but on this point the following observations shou ld be made: a) Harnack' s statis tic which raises the number of believers in Rome to about 30,000 is based on Eusebius and relates to the middle of the third century,
14
on account of the persecutions. What is important is the fact that in whatever house the Eucharist was celebrated, it included all the faithful of the city and was in consequence one Eucharist express-
ing the one Church sojourning in that place. 16 This classic passage was probably the original form of the phrase "Church in the household," or vice versa.
This is how it is interpreted by e.g. E.A. Jud ge, op . cit. p. 37. Cf F.J. Foakes Jackson - K. Lake (ed.), The Beginnings of Ch ristianity, IV, p. 29. 18 The reference to papyri (P. Ryl. 11, 76,10) in F.J. Foakes Jackson - K. Lake (ed.), op. cit. IV, p. 29, note 46, in support of such a 17
mea ning is unacceptable in the case of this passage because .the
verb w ith which the phrase "kat' oikon" is connected here does not signify motion. It is perhaps natural to understand " kilt' oikon" as mea ning "from house to house" if the verb in the sentence implies mo tion (e.g. in the phrase "it was distributed kat' oikon"). But this interpreta tio n is impossible with a verb th at cenotes a state, such as "to break bread." 19
"Saul laid waste the church, entering .house after house (kata
tOllSoikoliS eisporeuomenos)."
"I did not shrink from declaring to you anything th at was profitable, and teaching you in public and from house to house 20
(kat' oikous)." 21 1 Cor. 11 :16. 22 2 Cor. 11 :28. See e.g. its influence on the formation of the Church's polity in G. Konidaris, On the Supposed Difference, p. 56. 23
24
Ignatius, who writes epistles in the Pauline manner, preserves
the by now established term "church," and indeed in a purely Pauline sense, as we shall see below; but he uses the term "house"
with no connection to the Church (Smyrn. 13, Polyc. 8:2). This is the first indication in the sources that the phrase "Church in the household" has been abandoned. This is due to the fact that by Igna tius' time the term "church" had already prevailed as the expression of a reality which had formerly been expressed by several different terms. 25 This probably took place around the end o f the third century.
167
EUCHARIST, BISHOP, CHURCH
Notes to Part Two
when, as we shall see later, the increase in the number of believers
"in cities." See Eusebius, Eccl. Hist. IV.23.10: "For from the beginning this has been your practice, to do good to all the brethren in various ways, and to send supplies to many churches in all the cities." ., Dos Institut der Chorbiscilbfe illl Orient;historisch-kanonisch Studie
166
did indeed lead to the appearance of parishes; b) as to the information given by justin in his reply to the Prefect, it should not be forgotten that he is trying to conceal the location of the eucharistic assembly, obviously so that the faithful would not be arrested; whereas, when he is w riting his Apology and is not obliged to specify the location of the assembly, he does not hesitate to stat~ clearly that all the faithful in Rome came together in one place for the celebration of the Eucharist; c) as to the d ivision of Rome into 25 parishes between the times of Dionysius (259-68) and Marcellus (308 / 9), our only source is the Liber Pontificalis, which even Harnack himself does not consider reliable. Anyway, leaving that aside, these tituli do not necessarily sig nify eucharistic assemblies. Cf. also Part III below. JJ A. H arnack, Mission, II, p. 278; R. Knopf, Nachapostolischer Zeitalter, 1905, p. 61 and K.5. Latourette, A History of the Expansion of Christianity, I, 1953, p. 11 0. J4 Pliny the Younger, Ep. X, 97 and 98. Despite this, we consider that a,lready in Paul's Epistles there is a suggestion that there were Christians in the countryside. The phrase "with all the saints who are in the w hole of Achaea" (2 Cor. I :1), placed in contradistinction to the Christians in the city of Corinth, probably indicates the existence of Christians outside the cities as well. ct. above, p. 50f. 35 justin, I Apol. 67. J6 j. Toutain, "Pagani, Pagus," in Diction. des Antiquitt's Grecques et Romaines, VI, p . 273ff; A. Grenier, "Vicus, vicani," ibid. V, p. 854ff. 37 A. Grenier, Manllel d' Archeologie gallo-romaine, III. p. 696, where the inscription discovered in Solicia and dated 28 june 232 is published: "Genio pagi Derveti peregrini qui posuer(unt) vico Soliciae... " J8 This theory was first developed by Imbart de la Tour in his work Les Paroisses Rurales du IV' au XI' Sieele, 1900 (this book was not avai lable to us, but the gist of it can be found in La Revue Historique, vols. LX, LXI. LXVIl and LXVIII). At least as regards the West, this had been the prevailing theory for a long time. W. Seston successfully set out to refute it in his article, "Note sur les Origines Relig ieuses des Paroisses Rurales," in Revue d'Hist. et Phi/os. relig. 15 (1935), 243-54. 39
We base this supposition on the general character of Justin's
Apologtj, written as it is in the name of all Christians generally, and on the fact that he knew other Chu rches besides that of Rome. " This view is supported by the noteworthy fact that Dionysius of Corinth, who is writing at this time, knows of Churches only
•
(Ver6ffentlichungen aus dem Kirchenhistorischen Seminar, II, 1),
1903. ., See above p. 94. " justin, 1 Apol. 65 and 67. 41
There is, therefore, no basis for the view of earlier scho lars ,
such as Bergere (Etudes Historiques sur les Choriveques, 1905), according to which the West did not know of chorepiscopi before the eighth century. The title certainly did not appear from the beginning, but the institution itself, as we shall see, exis ted earlier.
" See H efele-Leclercq, Histoire des Coneiles, 11/ 2, col. 1210. % ibid. 47 Theodoret of Cyr, Compendium of Heretical Fables IIl.5, PG. 83.408A. " Eusebius, Ecel. Hist., VI1.30.10. ct. C h. Papadopoulos, On Chorepiscopi alld Titular Bishops (in Greek), 1935, p. 6ff. " V. Stephanidis (Church History p . 87) also refers to the passage in Eusebius' Eccl. Hist., VII.24.6. But does that have to d o with Bishops, or with presbyters according to the system of the Church of Alexandria?
The Councils of Sardica (Can. 6) and Laodicea (Can. 57) forbade the installation of chorepiscopi henceforth. See V. Stephanidis, op. cit. p. 87. The information in Clement of Alexandria (Who is the Rich Man Who shall be Saved? 42), that when john was in Ephesus "H e was invited to go out also into the adjacent lands of the Gen50
tiles, in som e places to install Bishops and in others to set in order
whole Churches," probably refers to dioceses and rural Churches around Ephesus, which were ancient in orig in. 51 In the past, it was the v iew that the chorepiscopi were pres-
byters with semi-episcopal jurisdiction; that they were initially full Bishops has been maintained more recently, principally by F. Gillmann (op. cit.). ct. Leclercq, D.A.C.L. III / I, 1435f. and Ch. Papadopoulos, On Chorepiscopi, p. 8. " The Greek text is taken from the edition of Prof. H . Alivizatos, The Sacred Canons (in Greek; ed. Apostoliki Diakonia), 1949' , p. 161ff. 53 See Leclercq's detailed analysis of the texts in D.A.C.L 1lI/l, 1425f. From examination of the manuscripts, it emerges that Prof. Alivizatos' text, used here, is the most probable.
EUCHARISf, BISHOP, CHURCH
Notes to Part Two
Chiefly over the meaning of "a/la men mede presbuterous poleos" a nd "en etaim paroikia," on which see ibid, 1428f. 55 So the Canon is interpreted by the Byzantine canonis ts Balsamon and Aristin os (EG, 137,1160), as also by more recent foreign scholars, including R.B. Seckham, The Text of the Canons of Ancyra (Studia Ecclesiastica, III) 1891, p, 192, The text oftheCanon is as follows: "Chorepiscopi are not allowed to ordain presbyte rs or deacons, not even presbyters of the city (alia men mede presbuterous po/eos), w ithou t written permission from the Bishop, in another community (en etaira paroikia ). 56 It should be seen as indicative of this importance that the Canon of Neocaesarea, which is more or less contemporary with tha t of An cyra, lays stress less on minimizing the importance of the chorepiscopi than on equa ting them with Bishops in the supreme ministry of the Divine Eucharis t ca lling them "concelebrants" with the Bishop s, 57 A similar clear sign of the gradual decrease in the importance of the chorepiscopi appears in the 8th Canon of the Council of Antio,h which deprives them of the right to issue "letters pacificaL" 58 y. Stephanidis (op, cit, p , 68) asks whether perha ps the concern here is with the name of Bishop being brought into disrepute because of quarrels between chorepiscopi and Bishops of the towns, But careful examination of the Canon makes it clear that the "degradation" is due to th e smallness of the village: "but if there is a town tha t is growing so much in numbers of people that it is considered worthy of a bishopric, let it have [a Bishop] ," H , Alivizatos, op , cit.p. 187, 59 "It is not permitted simply to insta ll a Bishop in a village or small town for which just one presbyter w ould suffice, For it is not necessary for Bish ops to be installed there, in order that the name and a uthority of a Bishop may not be degraded" (ibid ,), 60 Among this generation was St Basil the Great, who contributed to the decrease in the importance of the chorepiscopi (Letter to a Chorepiscopus, in Alivizatos, op , cit. p. 390f. 61 Aliviza tos, op, cit. p , 207f, " The disappearan ce of the chorepiscopi is confirmed by the fact that, contrary to the prevailing view, the number of Bishops fell rather than rising as time went on , For the years immediately following the fourth century, it is worthw hile investiga ting this fall in the number of Bishops on the basis of sources such as the Ac ts of the Councils, Minutes e tc., as well as th e works of Gerland -Gelzer and G, Konidaris,
In earlier times, no one considered that the small number of Christians was degrading to the n ame a nd authority of a Bishop as the Council of Laod ieea later thought, It is indicative of how things had changed in the m eantime that w hen, for instance, Gregory the Wonderworker became Bishop of Neocaesa rea in Pontus his flock initially numbered 17 Christians! (according to Gregory of Nyssa, Life of St Gregory the Wonderworker, EG , 46,953), 64 "That Bishops sh ould not be appointed in the Villages and country areas, but visitors (periodeutaj) instead" (H. Alivizatos, op cit, p ,207), 65 The ordination of a chorepiscopus "at la rge" and not for a p articular Church, w hi ch C h , Papad opoulos ta lks about (On Chorepiscopi, p , 9), is in n o way borne out by the sources, A Bishop wi thout a specific Church is not to be found in the first centuries, As a ba s ic ecclesiological principle, this app lied t o the chorepiscopu s too, 66 Eusebius, Ecc!. Hist, IY.23,6, 67 Thus for exa mple K, Muller, Beitrage zur Geschicltte der Verfa ssung der alten Kirche (in the series Abhand lungen d , Preuss , , Akad, d , Wiss" phiL-hist., ki., N o, 3), 1922, p, 7, "See A , Harnack, Mission, II', p , 574, " Eu sebius, Ecc!. Hist, IY.23.5, 10 See inter alia Eusebius, Eccl, Hist. IV,23, 71 Eccl, Hist. IV,23.7, Cf, G, Konidaris, Ecclesiastical History of Greece (in Greek), I, p, 407ft. n E.g, in L. Duchesn e, Fastes Episcopaux de [' Ancienne Gaul, 1907', pp,40-43, " E,g. in p, Nautin, Lettres et Ecrivains Chretiens des II' et III' sitcles, 1961, p, 93, 74 See WM, Ramsey, Cities and Bishoprics of Phrygia, I-II, 1897, 75 See L. Duchesne, Fastes Episcopaux, p , 148, ;, Eccl, Hist, VA L 17 Op, cit. p , 46f, 78 For this distinction see G. Konidaris, On the Supposed Difference.
168
54
,
,
169
63
;9
Eccl, Hist, VA.2,
Despite the conclusions of W Telfer, op. cit. p, 96, " Eccl, Hist. VL8.7 and 11.3, 82 So the Chrollic. ad amHlm 212 (ed, Helm, p , 213): "Alexander was ordained the thirty-fifth Bishop of Jerusalem w hile Narcissus was still alive, and governed the C hurch alongSide him" (cu m eo 80
pariter),
EUCHARIST, BISHOP, CHURCH
Notes to Part Two
Thus, G. Bardy in his edition of Eusebius' Ecclesiastical History in the series SOllrces Chretiennes, No. 41, 1955, p . 156, note 13. 84 Eccl. Hist. VI.11 .3.
See Dionysius of Alexa ndria apud Eusebius, Eecl. His!. VlI.11.12, where "Egypt" signifes the countryside as opposed to Alexandria which is called "the city." 98 "In the fourth year of Domitian, Annianus, th e first [Bishop] of the paroikia in Alexandria, died after completing 22 years [in office], and was succeeded by the second [Bishop], Albius" (ibid. 111.14). See likewise IV.1 and IV.5.5. In connection with Demetrius himself, too, the term paroikia is often used in the Singular. Thus, "When Demetrius, who presided over the paroikia there [in Alexandria], found out about this later... " (ibid. V1.8.3). Likewise ibid . Vl.19.I5: "to Demetrius the Bishop of the paroikia [of Alexa ndria]." " See above, p. 94fl. 100 This view is supported by research on the liturgical texts from Egypt, which, as Prof. P. Trembelas shows (Mikron Evchologion, I, 1950, p. 216), remain inexplicable if w hat were later held to be "presbyters" of Alexandria during the first three centuries are not regarded as chorepiscopi. The way these pieces of evidence dovetail is noteworthy for the thesis of this work. 101 See Eusebius, Eecl, Hist. X.4.68. 102 First Ecumenical Council, Canon 8 (ed. Alvizatos, p. 28f. )
170
171
,
I,
83
85
E.g. EecI. Hist. VI.34: lois en paraptomasin exetazomenois
(those found to be in transgression). 86 Eusebius is obviously making a similar mistake, on the basis of who knows w hat unclear sources, in the case of Anatolius Bishop of Caesarea in Palestine, of w hom he w rites: "Theotectus, bishop of Caesarea in Palestine, first ord ained him as Bishop, intending to make him his successor in his own paroikia after his d eath, and for a short time both of them presid ed over the same Church. (Eccl. Hist. VII.32.21). 87 See e.g Ch. Papadopoulos, History of the Ch urch of Alexandria (in Greek), p. 484 and G. Konidaris, G.c.H., pp. 142 and 243. Likewise E. Schwartz, Die Kirchengeschichte des Ellsebills, III, 1909, p. ccxxi; W. Bauer, op. cit. p . 68 and W. Telfer, op. cit. p. 106. 88 Eccl. Hist. IY.23.1. Cf. also 111.4.11: "Besides these, tha t Areopagite, named Dionysius ... is mentioned by another Dionysius, an ancient w riter and pastor of the paroikia of the Corinthians, as the first Bishop of the Church in Athens." 89 Eccl, Hist. IY. 23.7. '" ibid . Y.5.8. Cf. V.4.l. 91 ibid. Vl.43.21 and VII.3. 92 ibid . VII.28.1: "Of these, the most eminent were Firmilianus, Bishop of Caesarea in Cappadocia, the brothers Gregory and Athenodorus, pastors of the paroikies in Pontus, and in add ition Helenus of the paroikia in Tarsus and Nicomas of that in Iconium; and moreover, Hymenaeus of the Church in Jerusalem ." Cf. ibid. Y.24.14-15, where the same meaning should be given to the term paroikia. On this, see also below. " Ibid. IV.1. 0. 111.14; IV.5.5; VI.8.3. " Cf. charac teristically ibid. VII.30.17, w here the terms "catholie church" and "paroikia" are equated: "Therefore we have been compelled to excommunicate him, since he sets himself against God and refuses to obey, and to appoint in his place another Bishop for the catholic clHlrch; by divine Providence, as we believe, [we appoint] Domnus, son of the blessed Demetrianus, who formerly presided in a distinguished manner over the same paroikia ... " 95 Ibid. 11.16: "And they say that this Mark was the first to be sent to Egypt, and that he proclaimed the Gospel w hich he had composed, and first established churches at Alexandria." 96 Ibid . VlII.13.7.
•
•
97
103
Smyrn. 8.
See above, Introduction. 1115 Augustine did this in his desire to combat the provincialism of the Donatists. Cf. P. Batiffol, Le Catholicisme de Saint Augustin, 1929', p. 212. 106 Immediately after the third century, Cyril of Jerusalem gives the first synthetic definition of the catholicity of the Church, in which the concept of universality forms merely a part of the meaning of the term "Catholic Church" : "She is called ca tholic because she ex tends throughout all the world, from one end of the earth to the other; and because she teaches universally (katholik6s) and completely all the doctrines tha t should come to men's knowledge ... and because she brings into subjection to godliness the w hole race o f mankind ... and beca use she uni versally treats and heals the whole species of sins ... and possesses in herself every form of virtue w hich is named ... " (Cateehetiea l Orations 18.23, PG 33:1044). From the fourth century on, the term requires particular study. Cf. A. Gopfert, Die Kntholizitiit. Eine dogmengesehichtliche Studie, 1876, In recent times, Roman Ca th olic theology in particular, for ecclesiological reasons and mainly in order to give ecclesiological import to the Bishop of Rome as universal Bishop, has identified catholicity totally with the world wide character or universality of 104
E UCHARIST, B ISHOP, CHURCH
Notes to Part Two
the Church, No table exceptions are (from the viewpoint of historical research on the term) j, Moehler, who strongly rejects the identification of "catholic" with the "world-wide" or "universal" Church, at least in respect of the sources from the first three centuries (op, cit" French translation pp, 246-249); and from the viewpoint of systematic theology, E. Mersch, La Theologie dll Corps Mystique, II, 1946', p, 234fl. and H , de Lubac, CatilOlicisme, Les Aspects Sociaux dll Dogme, 1947', p , 26, Y. M,-j, Congar (Sainte Eglise, Etudes et Approches Ecc/esiologiques, 1963, p, 158fO connects cath olicity with the idea of the "fullness of Christ" in which multiplicity is combined with unity, In modern Orthodox theology, the meaning of the term "Catholic Ch urch" has yet to be examined from an historical point of view, while from the viewpoint of systematic theology Cyril of jerusalem 's synthetic definition largely prevails, Thus, in L Karmiris' Synopsis (pp, 89fl.) the following tripartite d efinition is given: "She is catholic firstly as being spread ? ut and including followers all over the world and throughout time, without any restrictions of place or time ... Secondly... in the sense of being orthod ox - as opposed to the various heretical and schism at ic church es, ., Thirdl y, catholicity denotes the un ity and wholeness and identity of the Church as the body of Christ... From the above it becomes clear that catholicity is not m erely a quantitative mark of the Church, but also at the same time a qualitative one .... " For a similarly composite definition, encompassing the local, chronological, exterior and interior senses of kath' a/oll, see P. Trembelas' Dogmatics, II, p, 356fl. Also to be found, however, is an iden tification of catholicity chiefl y and p rimaril y with the geographical extension of the Church to the ends of the earth, So for example in Ch, Androutsos, Dogmatics of the Orthodox Eastern Church, 1907, p, 279, Cf, also K. Mouratidis, The Essence and Polity, p, 178fl. Other Orthodox theologians, however, consider this identification admissible onl y on the assumption that the worldwide character of the Church would be regard ed as a consequence and secondary element of catholicity, the essence of w hich should on no account be understood in a quantitative or geographical sense, as is presupposed by its identification w ith the worldwide and uni versal character of the Chu rch, Thus G, Florovsky observes in "Le Corps du Christ" (/oc, cit" pp.24-27): "In the earliest d couments, th e term katholike ekklesia was never used in a quantitative sense, to denote the geographical spread of the Church ... The universal geographical ex tent of the Church is but a m anifes tatio n or an interpretation of this inner integrity, of the spiritual plenitude of
the Church ... 'Catholic' as 'universal' has been taken into the current theological vocabula ry, first of the West and later of the East as welL In fact, this was a terrible diminution of the grand idea of catholicity, an unhappy mutilation of the primitive conception, The main accen t has been transferred to something that is mere ly secondary and derivative, and what is truly essential has been ignored ... Catholicity in its essence is in no way a geographica l or spatial concept... It is quite possible that at a given period heretics or indeed atheists might be more numerous than the faithful and indeed spread everywhere, 'ubique: and the Catholic Church might be red uced, empirically speaking, to a 'negligible quantity: driven into the desert or into 'caves and holes in the ground .. : 'Catholic' is not a collective name. The Church is not ca tholic only inasmuch as she gathers all the local communities ... " Here, of course, we are investigating excluSively the sources from the first three centuries, in the light of w hich the question will be posed regarding the meaning of the term "Catholic Church" as it de veloped in the consciousness of the Church during that period, 107 Aristotle, Rhetoric 1, 7, 15, 10; Aristotle, On Interpretation 7, 1 109 Aristotle, Metaphysics 2, 6, 7ff: "katiiolou einai ai arkhai" - "the principles are universals." Cf. Nicomach ian Ethics 2, 7,1: "oi katholou logoi" - "general statemen ts," 110 Aristotle, Metaphysics 4, 26, 2 lET W,O, Ross, The Works of Aristotle, Oxford 1982], Notable is the identification we observe here of ca tholicity w ith "wholeness" and "oneness," III Aristotle, 011 In terpretation 7, 17. 112 Polybius 6, 5, 3: "general (katltolike) exposition" in contrast to "detailed discussion" (kata meros logos), Similarly 1,57,4; 8,4,11; 3,37,6: "These countries regarded from a general point of view"
172
•
,
173
(katholikoteron), 113 On Composition of Words 12: "For it is not in the nature of the thing to admit of general (katholiken ) and technical comprehension." 114 Life of Pompey, where "general (katholou) inquiry" is used in the sense in w hich Aristotle uses "general proof" (Prior Analytics l,l ), 115 Philo, Life of Moses n, 32 (ed, Cohn, Vol. I, p. 212), H. Wolfson, Philo, n, 1947, p. 181. 117 Cf, G, Konidaris, On tlte Slipposed Difference p , 45fl. '" See above p, 87, 119 Patres Apostolici 1, 1901, p, 283, 120 Tlte Apostolic Fathers - ignatius and Polycarp, I, 1889, p, 310, Cf, E.C Blackman, Marcion and his Influence, 1948, p , 15, 116
E UCHARIST, BISHOP, CHURCH
Notes to Part Two
m op. cit. p. 166ff. 122 La Theologie de rEglise de s. Clement de Rome tl s. lrenee, 1945, p. 64ff.
to the place where he is staying, as Lightfoot thinks (op. cit. p . 201). For the view that the phrase "Bishop of Syria" (Rom. 2:2) implies a sort of metropolitan authority, see G. Konidaris, On the Supposed Difference p. 47, and V. Corwin, Saint Ignatius and Christianity in Alltioch, 1960, p. 44ff. "0 Cf. Trallians and Romans, preamble. Ct. also P. Chrestou, True Life according to the Teaching of Ignatius the God-bearer [in Greek]. 1951, p. 36. 131 "Most worthy of God and most holy." etc. 132 Ignatius, Eph. 5:1: "I reckon you [the Ephesians) happy as being joined to him [the Bishop) as the Church is to jesus Christ and as jesus Christ is to the Father." 133 Ignatius, Eph. 5:2-3, ' 34 Cf. p. 48 above. 135 Ct. especially Ignatius, Eph. 20:2: the Eucharist is the "medi-
174
The view that catholicolicity=universality seems to have prevailed in Roman Catholic theology. See e.g. H . Mourea u, "Catholicite:' in D.T.C. 11/2 (1939), col. 1999, and H . Leclercq, "Catholique:' in D.A.C.L. II /2 (1910), col. 2624. This view is of 123
course an inevitable consequence of Roman Catholic ecclesiology
which takes each· local Church to be a segment of the worldwide Church. Hence the efforts of Roman Catholic theology to interpret ancient catholicity too in this sense, as does e.g. P Galtier, who writes in reference to Polycarp's time (and in total contempt of the highly significant passage from the Martyrdom of Polycarp, 16, 2) that: "each of the local Churches is like a section of the great universal catholic Church" ("Ad his qui su nt undique:' in Revue d'Histoire ecclesinstique 44 (1949), 425. • '" This was the conclusion drawn by H. Genouillac, L'Eglise chretienne au temps de s. Ignace d' Antioche, 1907, p . 108. A different view ,was expressed by Kattenbusch (Das apostolische Symbol, n, pp. 920-927), according to which katholike in the passage ofignatius under discussion means una sola; but this seems not to have found support. 125 See above p. 13. 116 "The multitude" (to plethos) is a technical tenn for the local Church. See F. Gerke, Die Stellung des 1. Clemensbriefes innerhalb der
Entwicklung der altchristlichen Gemeillde-Verfassung und des Kirchenrechts, 1931, p. 132. Elsewhere .. the multitude" seems to mean the laypeople as opposed to the clergy and particularly the Bishop. See, in Magn. 6:1, Tral. 1:2 and 8:2. 127 Cf. Ignatius, Eph. 2:2, 4:1; Magn. 7:1, 13:2; Tral. 2:1, 13:2; Philad. inscr., 2:1. 7:1-2 (concerning the character of priesthood by divine law. Ct. also 1:1: "Which Bishop, I know, obtained the ministry... not of himself, nor by men ..... ); Polyc. 4:1 , 5:2, where marriage is explicitly added to those rites which have to be perfonned by the Bishop. 128 He was fully aware that he was imitating Paul in this matter, as evidenced by the passage in the Epistle to the Trallians (inscr.): "which also I greet in its fullness, in apostolic character." 129 An exception is the phrase .. the Church in Syria" or "the Church of Syria"; but these should not be understood as .. the Church of the province of Syria" but as the Church of Syria par excellence, i.e. Antioch, or as a straightforward reference by Ignatius
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cine of immortality."
", Eph. 13:1. To Polycarp 4:2. Ct. P. Chrestou, op. cit. p. 38. 137 Cf. j. Romarodes, The Ecclesiology of St Ignatius of Antioch, 1956, p. 10ft., and more generally c.c. Richardson, "The Church in Ignatius of Antioch," in Journal of Religion 17 (1937), pp. 428-443. 138
Smyrn. 7:1: the Docetists abstain from the Eucharist "in or-
der to avoid confessing that the Eucharist is the flesh of our Savior jesus Christ which suffered for our sins, and which the Father in His goodness raised up." 139 Magn. 1:2; Eph. 10:3. 140 Tral. 2:3. For the identification of Church and altar see also Philad . 4; Magn. 7:2; Ephes. 5:2 and Tral. 7:2. 14 1 See p. 45f. and 56f. 142 Eph. 4:2. 143 Smyrn, 1:2. 14' Smyrn, 7:1. '
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To the original text are added descriptions of the Presbyters as priests" , i.e. those who offer the Eucharist: - Let the rulers be obedient to Caesar. .. the deacons, to the presbyters, the high priests" (Philad. 4) - the priests and deacons are good, but the high priest is better" (Philad. 9)
i) Ap. COl1st. VIII and Epitome. While the prayer for the ordination of a bishop
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i) Ap. COl1st. l-VI: to the functions of the Presbyters aTe added: " ... to offer, baptize,
- The Bishop" presides in the place of God Almighty" and" makes you partakers of the Holy Eucharist of God" , whereas - " the Presbyters form the " council of the Bishop" (Did. 9)
remains the same, at the ordina tion of a presbyter the words are added: " that... he ..,()~ ~. ~ c may also ... perform the spotless sacred rites on behalf of Thy people" (Ap . Canst. ~ ~ ~ VIIl.l6.5 and Epitome 6) ii) Canons of Hippolytus: No special prayer for the ordination ~ :)l-Cl ' .... . o-". of a Presbyter; it refers you to that for the ord ination of a Bishop, on the grounds that ~ the only difference between Bishops and Presbyters is the right to ordain
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